Re: [PATCH] net: ethernet: davicom: fix devicetree irq resource

From: Sergei Shtylyov
Date: Thu Feb 04 2016 - 15:56:47 EST


On 02/04/2016 11:42 PM, Robert Jarzmik wrote:

Your patch summary prefixes are too verbose, it was enough to say only
"dm9000: ".

Or "davicom: dm9000: ". Missing the driver name itself doesn't look very consistent. :-)

Well, I don't agree here. The subsystem should be fully specified, at least this
is something I require in pxa, something that is also required in sound/*, etc
... If David doesn't object, I'll keep it that way. As it's his tree, his
decision in the end, so let's have him decide.

I expect that he disagrees with you. Let's wait...

- /* If there is no IRQ type specified, default to something that
- * may work, and tell the user that this is a problem */
-
- if (irqflags == IRQF_TRIGGER_NONE)
- irqflags = irq_get_trigger_type(dev->irq);
-
- if (irqflags == IRQF_TRIGGER_NONE)
+ /* If there is no IRQ type specified, tell the user that this is a
+ * problem */

The networking code formats comments this way:

/* foo
* bar
*/
May I know where this is documented ?

Documentation/CodingStyle, chapter 8. Have you run your patch thru scripts/checkpatch.pl?

I'm asking because I didn't find it, because I parsed drivers/net/*.c files, and
the standard kernel comment style was there, ie:
/*
* foo
* bar
*/

But you didn't follow it as well?

I was reusing the previous comment style,

Ah...

but I will change it for the standard
kernel style if you wish.

Yes, I think checkpatch.pl checks for that, --strict is forced for the networking code.


+ ndev->irq = platform_get_irq(pdev, 0);
+ if (ndev->irq <= 0) {

I don't recommend checking for 0 and returning early in this case --
you'll signal a probe success this way. Either ignore 0 or return -E<smth>
in this case. Unfortunately, platform_get_irq() is so sloppily coded now that it
*can* return 0 on error. :-(

I'll try looking into this issue once I get more free time...

Ah we had that discussion not very long ago, didn't we ? :)

Yeah, I remembered that just after hitting <Send>. :-)

And I think I'll reuse the "if (ndev->irq < 0) {" solution to be consistent with
myself.

Thanks for the review.

My pleasure. :-)

MBR, Sergei