[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index] Re: [PATCH 1/2] common: map_vcpu_info() cosmetics
On 17/07/2020 09:16, Jan Beulich wrote: On 16.07.2020 18:17, Julien Grall wrote:On Thu, 16 Jul 2020, 17:01 Jan Beulich, <jbeulich@xxxxxxxx> wrote:On 16.07.2020 16:42, Roger Pau Monné wrote:On Thu, Jul 16, 2020 at 01:48:51PM +0200, Jan Beulich wrote:On 16.07.2020 13:41, Roger Pau Monné wrote:On Wed, Jul 15, 2020 at 12:15:10PM +0200, Jan Beulich wrote:Use ENXIO instead of EINVAL to cover the two cases of the address not satisfying the requirements. This will make an issue here better stand out at the call site.Not sure whether I would use EFAULT instead of ENXIO, as the description of it is 'bad address' which seems more inline with the error that we are trying to report.The address isn't bad in the sense of causing a fault, it's just that we elect to not allow it. Hence I don't think EFAULT is suitable. I'm open to replacement suggestions for ENXIO, though.Well, using an address that's not properly aligned to the requirements of an interface would cause a fault? (in this case it's a software interface, but the concept applies equally).Not necessarily, see x86'es behavior. Also even on strict archesit is typically possible to cover for the misalignment by usingsuitable instructions; it's still an implementation choice to not do so.I am not sure about your argument here... Yes it might be possible, but at what cost?The cost is what influences the decision whether to support it. Nevertheless it remains an implementation decision rather than a hardware imposed restriction, and hence I don't consider -EFAULT suitable here.Anyway, not something worth arguing about I think, so unless someone else disagrees I'm fine with using ENXIO.Good, thanks.-EFAULT can be described as "Bad address". I think it makes more sense than -ENXIO here even if it may not strictly result to a fault on some arch.As said - I don't consider EFAULT applicable here; AFAICT, you don't consider it because you think that using the address means it will always lead to a fault. However, this is just a strict interpretation of the error code. A less strict interpretation is it could be used for any address that is considered to be invalid. -ENXIO makes less sense because the address exists. To re-use your argument, this is just an implementation details. I also consider EINVAL as too generic. I'll be happy to see replacement suggestions for my ENXIO choice, but obviously I'm not overly happy to see options re-suggested which I did already say I've ruled out. I think I am allowed to express my opinion even if it means this was already said... However, I should have been clearer and say that I agree with Roger's suggestion about -EFAULT. Cheers, -- Julien Grall
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