On Mon, Jan 11, 2021 at 05:37:36PM +0000, Colin Ian King wrote:
On 11/01/2021 16:35, Mark Brown wrote:
On Fri, Jan 08, 2021 at 12:35:46PM +0000, Colin King wrote:
From: Colin Ian King colin.king@canonical.com
Currently when attempting to start the BE fails because the FE is not started the error return variable ret is not initialized and garbage is returned. Fix this by setting it to 0 so the
This doesn't apply against current code, please check and resend.
Current ASoC tree now has two commits:
commit 4eeed5f40354735c4e68e71904db528ed19c9cbb Author: Souptick Joarder jrdr.linux@gmail.com Date: Sat Jan 9 09:15:01 2021 +0530
ASoC: soc-pcm: return correct -ERRNO in failure path
commit e91b65b36fde0690f1c694f17dd1b549295464a7 Author: Dan Carpenter dan.carpenter@oracle.com Date: Mon Jan 11 12:50:21 2021 +0300
ASoC: soc-pcm: Fix an uninitialized error code
..both set ret to non-zero, which I believe will throw a subsequent warning messagethat's not strictly related.
My patch restored the original behavior. And I think that errors should return error codes. What you're saying is basically "Returning an error is a bug because it will trigger an error message in the caller". So then we have to have a debate about printks as a layering violation.
I don't like error messages generally, because I think they make the code messy. A lot of people put error messages for impossible things. Or if a kmalloc() fails or whatever. There are too many error messages which people add in an auto-pilot way without considering whether it's necessary.
But some people think, and maybe they're correct, that it's best if every function in the call tree prints a message. That way you can trace the error path easily.
regards, dan carpenter