Reviewed-by: Ajay Singh <ajay.kathat@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> On Thu, 20 Sep 2018 22:39:11 -0700 Nathan Chancellor <natechancellor@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: > On Fri, Sep 21, 2018 at 01:25:32AM -0400, valdis.kletnieks@xxxxxx > wrote: > > On Thu, 20 Sep 2018 14:26:49 -0700, Nathan Chancellor said: > > > Clang warns that the address of a pointer will always evaluated > > > as true in a boolean context: > > > > > > drivers/staging/wilc1000/linux_wlan.c:267:20: warning: address of > > > 'vif->ndev->dev' will always evaluate to 'true' > > > [-Wpointer-bool-conversion] > > > if (!(&vif->ndev->dev)) > > > ~ ~~~~~~~~~~~^~~ > > > 1 warning generated. > > > > > > Since this statement always evaluates to false due to the logical > > > not, remove it. > > > > Often, "just nuke it because it's now dead code" isn't the best > > answer... > > > > At one time, that was likely intended to be checking whether ->dev > > was a null pointer, to make sure we don't pass request_firmware() a > > null pointer and oops the kernel, or other things that go > > pear-shaped.... > > > > So the question becomes: Is it safe to just remove it, or was it > > intended to test for something that could legitimately be null if > > we've hit an error along the way (which means we should fix the > > condition to be proper and acceptable to both gcc and clang)? > > > > > > I certainly considered whether or not removing the check versus fixing > it was the correct answer. Given that this check can be traced back to > the initial check in of the driver in 2015, I figured it was safe to > remove it (since a null pointer dereference would most likely have > been noticed by now). > > Most patches addressing this warning just remove the check given that > it's not actually changing the code, such as commit a7dc662c6a7b > ("ASoC: codecs: PCM1789: unconditionally flush work"). However, if > the driver authors and/or maintainers think that this check should be > something else (maybe checking that the contents of dev is not null > versus the address, I'm perfectly happy to submit a v2 with this > change. > The 'if' condition was intended to check the validity of net_device structure, but i think its not required here. The device pointer used in request_firmware(), was received in the probe functions and different from the one checked in 'if' condition. Thus its safe to remove the 'if (!(&vif->ndev->dev))' condition block. Regards, Ajay