Some drivers can still provide their functionality to a certain extent even some of their resource acquisitions eventually fail. In such cases, emitting errors isn't the desired action, but warnings should be emitted instead. To solve this, introduce dev_warn_probe() as a new device probe log helper, which behaves identically as the already existing dev_err_probe(), while it produces warnings instead of errors. The intended use is with the resources that are actually optional for a particular driver. While there, copyedit the kerneldoc for dev_err_probe() a bit, to simplify its wording a bit, and reuse it as the kerneldoc for dev_warn_probe(), with the necessary wording adjustments, of course. Signed-off-by: Dragan Simic <dsimic@xxxxxxxxxxx> --- drivers/base/core.c | 110 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++--------- include/linux/dev_printk.h | 1 + 2 files changed, 84 insertions(+), 27 deletions(-) diff --git a/drivers/base/core.c b/drivers/base/core.c index 8c0733d3aad8..a4592b7ffa5d 100644 --- a/drivers/base/core.c +++ b/drivers/base/core.c @@ -4982,71 +4982,127 @@ define_dev_printk_level(_dev_info, KERN_INFO); #endif +static int dev_probe_failed(const struct device *dev, int err, bool fatal, + const char *fmt, va_list args) +{ + struct va_format vaf; + + vaf.fmt = fmt; + vaf.va = &args; + + switch (err) { + case -EPROBE_DEFER: + device_set_deferred_probe_reason(dev, &vaf); + dev_dbg(dev, "error %pe: %pV", ERR_PTR(err), &vaf); + break; + + case -ENOMEM: + /* Don't print anything on -ENOMEM, there's already enough output */ + break; + + default: + /* Log fatal final failures as errors, otherwise produce warnings */ + if (fatal) + dev_err(dev, "error %pe: %pV", ERR_PTR(err), &vaf); + else + dev_warn(dev, "error %pe: %pV", ERR_PTR(err), &vaf); + break; + } + + return err; +} + /** * dev_err_probe - probe error check and log helper * @dev: the pointer to the struct device * @err: error value to test * @fmt: printf-style format string * @...: arguments as specified in the format string * * This helper implements common pattern present in probe functions for error * checking: print debug or error message depending if the error value is * -EPROBE_DEFER and propagate error upwards. * In case of -EPROBE_DEFER it sets also defer probe reason, which can be * checked later by reading devices_deferred debugfs attribute. - * It replaces code sequence:: + * It replaces the following code sequence:: * * if (err != -EPROBE_DEFER) * dev_err(dev, ...); * else * dev_dbg(dev, ...); * return err; * * with:: * * return dev_err_probe(dev, err, ...); * - * Using this helper in your probe function is totally fine even if @err is - * known to never be -EPROBE_DEFER. + * Using this helper in your probe function is totally fine even if @err + * is known to never be -EPROBE_DEFER. * The benefit compared to a normal dev_err() is the standardized format - * of the error code, it being emitted symbolically (i.e. you get "EAGAIN" - * instead of "-35") and the fact that the error code is returned which allows - * more compact error paths. + * of the error code, which is emitted symbolically (i.e. you get "EAGAIN" + * instead of "-35"), and having the error code returned allows more + * compact error paths. * * Returns @err. */ int dev_err_probe(const struct device *dev, int err, const char *fmt, ...) { - struct va_format vaf; va_list args; va_start(args, fmt); - vaf.fmt = fmt; - vaf.va = &args; - switch (err) { - case -EPROBE_DEFER: - device_set_deferred_probe_reason(dev, &vaf); - dev_dbg(dev, "error %pe: %pV", ERR_PTR(err), &vaf); - break; + /* Use dev_err() for logging when err doesn't equal -EPROBE_DEFER */ + dev_probe_failed(dev, err, true, fmt, args); - case -ENOMEM: - /* - * We don't print anything on -ENOMEM, there is already enough - * output. - */ - break; + va_end(args); +} +EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL(dev_err_probe); - default: - dev_err(dev, "error %pe: %pV", ERR_PTR(err), &vaf); - break; - } +/** + * dev_warn_probe - probe error check and log helper + * @dev: the pointer to the struct device + * @err: error value to test + * @fmt: printf-style format string + * @...: arguments as specified in the format string + * + * This helper implements common pattern present in probe functions for error + * checking: print debug or warning message depending if the error value is + * -EPROBE_DEFER and propagate error upwards. + * In case of -EPROBE_DEFER it sets also defer probe reason, which can be + * checked later by reading devices_deferred debugfs attribute. + * It replaces the following code sequence:: + * + * if (err != -EPROBE_DEFER) + * dev_warn(dev, ...); + * else + * dev_dbg(dev, ...); + * return err; + * + * with:: + * + * return dev_warn_probe(dev, err, ...); + * + * Using this helper in your probe function is totally fine even if @err + * is known to never be -EPROBE_DEFER. + * The benefit compared to a normal dev_warn() is the standardized format + * of the error code, which is emitted symbolically (i.e. you get "EAGAIN" + * instead of "-35"), and having the error code returned allows more + * compact error paths. + * + * Returns @err. + */ +int dev_warn_probe(const struct device *dev, int err, const char *fmt, ...) +{ + va_list args; - va_end(args); + va_start(args, fmt); - return err; + /* Use dev_warn() for logging when err doesn't equal -EPROBE_DEFER */ + dev_probe_failed(dev, err, false, fmt, args); + + va_end(args); } -EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL(dev_err_probe); +EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL(dev_warn_probe); static inline bool fwnode_is_primary(struct fwnode_handle *fwnode) { diff --git a/include/linux/dev_printk.h b/include/linux/dev_printk.h index ca32b5bb28eb..eb2094e43050 100644 --- a/include/linux/dev_printk.h +++ b/include/linux/dev_printk.h @@ -276,6 +276,7 @@ do { \ dev_driver_string(dev), dev_name(dev), ## arg) __printf(3, 4) int dev_err_probe(const struct device *dev, int err, const char *fmt, ...); +__printf(3, 4) int dev_warn_probe(const struct device *dev, int err, const char *fmt, ...); /* Simple helper for dev_err_probe() when ERR_PTR() is to be returned. */ #define dev_err_ptr_probe(dev, ___err, fmt, ...) \