On Thu, 31 Aug 2017 11:56:16 +0200, Alexandre Belloni wrote:
On 31/08/2017 at 10:23:19 +0200, Julia Lawall wrote:
On Thu, 31 Aug 2017, Alexandre Belloni wrote:
On 31/08/2017 at 06:40:42 +0200, Christophe JAILLET wrote:
If 'clk_prepare_enable()' fails, we must release some resources before returning. Add a new label in the existing error handling path and 'goto' there.
Fixes: 260ea95cc027 ("ASoC: atmel: ac97c: Handle return value of clk_prepare_enable.") Signed-off-by: Christophe JAILLET christophe.jaillet@wanadoo.fr
And here is the fallout of the stupid, brainless "fixing" of issues reported by static analysis tools.
This clk_prepare_enable will never fail. If it was going to fail, the platform would never boot to a point were it is able to execute that code. It is really annoying to have so much churn for absolutely 0 benefit.
Would it be more productive to put the code back like it was before, ie no return value and no check, and add a comment to the definition of clk_prepare_enable indicating that there are many case where the call cannot fail? Grepping through the code suggests that it is about 50-50 on checking the return value or not doing so, which might suggest that checking the value is often not required.
I'd say that it is often useless to test the value. I don't have any problem with the test as it doesn't add much (at least it doesn't print an error message). So it may stays here. What I'm really unhappy about is people sending hundreds of similar, autogenerated patches to maintainers without actually putting any thought into them. That put all the burden on the maintainers to weed out the incorrect patches.
I share your concerns, e.g. the burden of maintenance is a problem.
But in this case, the original code looks really buggy. If the test doesn't make sense, don't test it but give a proper comment from the beginning. Instead, the current code does check the return value yet with the incorrect error path.
The proposed "fix" won't change any actual behavior in practice, which is useless, yes. (And this is good -- at least it's safe to apply :) OTOH, the semantics is a different question, and the patch corrects it, which isn't so stupid, IMO.
thanks,
Takashi