[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index] Re: [XEN PATCH 1/2] xen/console: drop return value from consoled_guest_rx/tx
On Mon, 26 Feb 2024, Jan Beulich wrote: > On 26.02.2024 09:23, Nicola Vetrini wrote: > > On 2024-02-26 09:00, Jan Beulich wrote: > >> On 23.02.2024 23:56, Stefano Stabellini wrote: > >>> On Fri, 23 Feb 2024, Nicola Vetrini wrote: > >>>> These functions never saw a usage of their return value since > >>>> they were introduced, so it can be dropped since their usages > >>>> violate MISRA C Rule 17.7: > >>>> "The value returned by a function having non-void return type shall > >>>> be used". > >>>> > >>>> No functional change. > >>>> > >>>> Signed-off-by: Nicola Vetrini <nicola.vetrini@xxxxxxxxxxx> > >>> > >>> Reviewed-by: Stefano Stabellini <sstabellini@xxxxxxxxxx> > >> > >> The cleanup is certainly okay, but would one of you mind clarifying in > >> how > >> far this code is relevant for certification? I don't expect there are > >> plans > >> to run shim Xen in any projected production uses for which > >> certification is > >> relevant? (The subject prefix is also unnecessarily wide here, when > >> it's > >> only daemon code which is affected, not console code in general.) > >> > > > > I agree on the subject prefix being too wide. The configuration that > > uses consoled_guest_tx is #ifdef-ed for x86, so even in configurations > > that may never reach this condition this is relevant, unless its #ifdef > > is restricted to cases where the call may actually be reachable. > > Hmm, I see. There are contradicting goals here then: It being just X86 is > to reduce the risk of someone overlooking a build breakage they may > introduce. Whereas for certification it's quite the other way around: We'd > like to "hide" as much code as possible. > > Really I would have been inclined to suggest to drop the #ifdef, if > possible even without replacing by IS_ENABLED(), but instead leveraging > that pv_shim ought to be compile-time false whenever CONFIG_PV_SHIM=n. This is OK > After all that's a pattern we've been trying to follow. But with your > observation is becomes questionable whether extending use of IS_ENABLED() > is actually going to be helpful. Stefano - perhaps something to discuss > on one of the next meetings? Yes. I checked with the safety manager and his opinion is that IS_ENABLED() is OK to use as a way to disable code from a safety perspective.
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