Several times recently Greg KH has admonished that variants of WARN() should not be used, because when the panic_on_warn kernel option is set, their use can lead to a panic. His reasoning was that the majority of Linux instances (including Android and cloud systems) run with this option enabled. And therefore a condition leading to a warning will frequently cause an undesirable panic. The "coding-style.rst" document says not to worry about this kernel option. Update it to provide a more nuanced explanation. Signed-off-by: Alex Elder <elder@xxxxxxxxxx> --- Documentation/process/coding-style.rst | 21 +++++++++++---------- 1 file changed, 11 insertions(+), 10 deletions(-) diff --git a/Documentation/process/coding-style.rst b/Documentation/process/coding-style.rst index 9c7cf73473943..bce43b01721cb 100644 --- a/Documentation/process/coding-style.rst +++ b/Documentation/process/coding-style.rst @@ -1235,17 +1235,18 @@ example. Again: WARN*() must not be used for a condition that is expected to trigger easily, for example, by user space actions. pr_warn_once() is a possible alternative, if you need to notify the user of a problem. -Do not worry about panic_on_warn users -************************************** +The panic_on_warn kernel option +******************************** -A few more words about panic_on_warn: Remember that ``panic_on_warn`` is an -available kernel option, and that many users set this option. This is why -there is a "Do not WARN lightly" writeup, above. However, the existence of -panic_on_warn users is not a valid reason to avoid the judicious use -WARN*(). That is because, whoever enables panic_on_warn has explicitly -asked the kernel to crash if a WARN*() fires, and such users must be -prepared to deal with the consequences of a system that is somewhat more -likely to crash. +Note that ``panic_on_warn`` is an available kernel option. If it is enabled, +a WARN*() call whose condition holds leads to a kernel panic. Many users +(including Android and many cloud providers) set this option, and this is +why there is a "Do not WARN lightly" writeup, above. + +The existence of this option is not a valid reason to avoid the judicious +use of warnings. There are other options: ``dev_warn*()`` and ``pr_warn*()`` +issue warnings but do **not** cause the kernel to crash. Use these if you +want to prevent such panics. Use BUILD_BUG_ON() for compile-time assertions ********************************************** -- 2.40.1