Jeff King <peff@xxxxxxxx> writes: > The end result is roughly the same, but it's a lot less churn, and it's > more likely for new callers to get it right, because they have to go the > extra mile to ignore the error. I say "roughly" because it treats cases > we missed as "die", whereas yours leaves them as "ignore". I find it > highly unlikely that any of them actually _want_ the ignore behavior, > though. Yes, I like this approach better. It admittedly is more risky in that it would die if the conversion missed a case that should ignore, but I suspect that such a breakage would be found rather quickly (and the one that goes latent are the ones that do not matter in practice because people would not encounter them). > I'm just pondering, though. I don't find the "or_die" variant bad at > all, so if you really prefer it, I don't mind. > > Just to get a sense of what the reverse would look like, I worked up the > patch below (which compiles but does not link, as I did not actually > implement the "gently" form). Some error-checking call-sites are > converted to the "die" form, because that's essentially what happens > anyway (and I'd venture to say that the config code can provide a much > better error message). This variant certainly looks nicer to me, for the reasons give above. -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe git" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html