On Wed, Jan 26, 2022 at 01:26:08PM +0300, Pavel Skripkin wrote: > Hi Phillip, > > On 1/26/22 04:13, Phillip Potter wrote: > > [snip] > > } > > > > > > And here you also removes the reads. I guess, some kind of magic pattern is > > > used > > > > > > > So these calls are macro arguments, they would never be executed under > > normal circumstances anyway, unless the rtw_debug kernel module was > > passed in as 5 or more - it is 1 by default. The DBG_88E macro would > > expand during preprocessing phase to (for example): > > > > do { > > if (5 <= GlobalDebugLevel) > > pr_info("R8188EU: " "dbg(0x450) = 0x%x\n", rtw_read32(padapter, 0x450)); > > } while (0) > > > > As this is never executed under normal circumstances anyway, I would say > > calls like these are therefore safe to remove. Happy to be convinced > > though :-) Many thanks. > > > > I see your point, thanks for explanation. > > Well, in this case, you may left all reads, that are executed during normal > lifetime of a driver. We know, that there is at least 1 place, where read() > call removal can break things. Might be there are couple of other places we > don't know about. > > IMHO the best thing you can do is to leave these reads and leave a comment > like "hey, please remove me and test". One day useless reads should be > anyway removed, since ideally rtw_read family must get __must_check > annotation + normal error handling. No, if these were never getting called in normal operation, there's no need to add them back. thanks, greg k-h