[PATCH 3/3] staging:iio:ad2s1210: Add write_raw to handle frequency

Dan Carpenter dan.carpenter at oracle.com
Tue Mar 13 13:59:57 UTC 2018


On Tue, Mar 13, 2018 at 10:06:29AM -0300, Rodrigo Siqueira wrote:
> On 03/13, Dan Carpenter wrote:
>
> > Ah...  I see why you did the ERROR_MESSAGE define, to get around the 80
> > character limit.  Don't do that.  Just go over 80 characters if you need
> > to.
> > 
> > 
> > > +					"fclkin");
> > > +				ret = -EINVAL;
> > > +				goto error_ret;
> > 
> > Direct returns are better.  Less chance of bugs statistically.
> 
> I totally get your point here, and I will fix it. However, just for
> curiosity, why goto in this situation has more chance to generate bugs
> statically?
> 

This is a do-nothing goto.  I normally consider do-nothing gotos and
do-everything gotos basically cousins but in this case it's probably
unfair since it already has other labels.

Do-everything gotos are the most error prone way of doing error
handling.  I've reviewed a lot of static checker warnings and it really
is true.  I can't give you like a percent figure but do-everything error
handling is a lot buggier than normal kernel style.

This style of error handling is supposed to prevent returning without
unlocking bugs.  I once looked through the git log and counted missing
unlock bugs and my conclusion was that it basically doesn't work for
preventing bugs.  The kind of people who just add random returns will do
it regardless of the error handling style.  There was even one driver
that indented locked code like this:

	lock(); {
		blah blah blah;
	} unlock();

When the driver was first submitted, it already had a missing unlock
bug.  I don't think style helps slow people down who are in a hurry.

The other thing about do-nothing gotos is that you introduce the
possibility of "forgot to set the error code" bugs which wasn't there
before.

regards,
dan carpenter








So actually "error_ret" seems like a pretty reasonable name for a
do-nothing goto.  I no

I've looked at a lot of error handling and this kind of error handling
is more error prone.  The single exit path thing is supposed to prevent
bugs like not dropping the lock on exit and I've looked through the logs
and counted bugs to see if it works and I don't think it does.  The
people who forget to unlock will forget to unlock regardless of the
error handling style.





> I will send a v2 with your recommendantions.
> Thanks for the review and feedbacks :)
>  
> > regards,
> > dan carpenter
> > 
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