On Wed, Mar 06, 2024 at 05:19:33PM +0800, Zorro Lang wrote: > As the manual of io_uring_queue_init says "io_uring_queue_init(3) > returns 0 on success and -errno on failure". We should check if the > return value is -ENOSYS, not the errno. /me checks liburing source code and sees that the library returns a negative error code without touching errno (the semi global error code variable) at all. That's an unfortunate quirk of the manpage, but this code here is correct... > Fixes: d15b1721f284 ("ltp/fsstress: don't fail on io_uring ENOSYS") > Signed-off-by: Zorro Lang <zlang@xxxxxxxxxx> > --- > ltp/fsstress.c | 4 ++-- > 1 file changed, 2 insertions(+), 2 deletions(-) > > diff --git a/ltp/fsstress.c b/ltp/fsstress.c > index 63c75767..482395c4 100644 > --- a/ltp/fsstress.c > +++ b/ltp/fsstress.c > @@ -763,8 +763,8 @@ int main(int argc, char **argv) > #ifdef URING > have_io_uring = true; > /* If ENOSYS, just ignore uring, other errors are fatal. */ > - if (io_uring_queue_init(URING_ENTRIES, &ring, 0)) { > - if (errno == ENOSYS) { > + if ((c = io_uring_queue_init(URING_ENTRIES, &ring, 0)) != 0) { > + if (c == -ENOSYS) { > have_io_uring = false; > } else { > fprintf(stderr, "io_uring_queue_init failed\n"); But why not: c = io_uring_queue_init(...); switch (c) { case 0: have_io_uring = true; break; case -ENOSYS: have_io_uring = false; break; default: fprintf(stderr, "io_uring_queue_init failed\n"); break; } Especially since you add another case in the next patch? I'll leave the style nits up to you though: Reviewed-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@xxxxxxxxxx> --D --D > -- > 2.43.0 > >