On Fri, Nov 27, 2015 at 7:18 AM, Mauro Carvalho Chehab <mchehab@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > Al Viro <viro@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> escreveu: > >> Take a look at this: >> static unsigned int gsc_m2m_poll(struct file *file, >> struct poll_table_struct *wait) >> { >> struct gsc_ctx *ctx = fh_to_ctx(file->private_data); >> struct gsc_dev *gsc = ctx->gsc_dev; >> int ret; >> >> if (mutex_lock_interruptible(&gsc->lock)) >> return -ERESTARTSYS; >> >> ret = v4l2_m2m_poll(file, ctx->m2m_ctx, wait); >> mutex_unlock(&gsc->lock); >> >> return ret; >> } >> >> a) ->poll() should not return -E...; callers expect just a bitmap of >> POLL... values. > > Yeah. We fixed issues like that on other drivers along the time. I guess > this is a some bad code that people just cut-and-paste from legacy drivers > without looking into it. Actually, while returning -ERESTARTSYS is bogus, returning _zero_ would not be. The top-level poll() code will happily notice the signal, and return -EINTR like poll should (unless something else is pending, in which case it will return zero and the bits set for that something else). So having a driver with a ->poll() function that does that kind of conditional locking is not wrong per se. It's just he return value that is crap. I also do wonder if we might not make the generic code a bit more robust wrt things like this. The bitmask we use is only about the low bits, so we *could* certainly allow the driver poll() functions to return errors - possibly just ignoring them. Or perhaps have a WARN_ON_OCNE() to find them. Al, what do you think? The whole "generic code should be robust wrt drivers making silly mistakes" just sounds like a good idea. Finding these things through code inspection is all well and good, but having a nice warning report from users might be even better. Linus -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-media" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html