> > > On 20 Sep 2017, at 18:27, Christophe Fergeau <cfergeau@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > > > On Wed, Sep 20, 2017 at 06:15:49PM +0200, Christophe de Dinechin wrote: > >> > >> > >>> On 20 Sep 2017, at 17:51, Christophe Fergeau <cfergeau@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > >>> > >>> On Wed, Sep 20, 2017 at 05:31:37PM +0200, Christophe de Dinechin wrote: > >>>> > >>>> > >>>>> On 20 Sep 2017, at 16:51, Christophe Fergeau <cfergeau@xxxxxxxxxx> > >>>>> wrote: > >>>>> > >>>>> On Wed, Sep 20, 2017 at 02:54:31PM +0200, Christophe de Dinechin wrote: > >>>>>>> > >>>>>>>> The benefit of doing it that way (in addition to requiring less > >>>>>>>> source code > >>>>>>>> changes and making following rebases or merge much easier) is that > >>>>>>>> it leaves > >>>>>>>> the option to instrument spice allocations specifically when the > >>>>>>>> need > >>>>>>>> arises. > >>>>>>>> > >>>>>>> > >>>>>>> There are many tools to instruments memory allocations and is not > >>>>>>> hard > >>>>>>> to write one on your own. For instance knowing that objects file > >>>>>>> takes > >>>>>>> precedence over libraries you can write a module defining malloc, or > >>>>>>> use > >>>>>>> --wrap linker option or LD_PRELOAD. > >>>>>> > >>>>>> That works if you want to instrument all malloc calls. If you want to > >>>>>> do > >>>>>> something specific to spice, you can’t do that. > >>>>> > >>>>> You could do that with systemtap for example. And I really don't think > >>>>> we should have our spice_xxx wrappers for library calls. > >>>> > >>>> But then, we don’t need g_xxx wrappers either, do we? > >>> > >>> They (both g_malloc and spice_malloc) abort on OOM, straight malloc does > >>> not. > >> > >> I know. And if that’s the only value add now, it does not mean it will > >> always be like that. > >> Having the wrapper means we can do something special for spice > >> allocations, if only > >> change the error message or display some spice context for the error. Just > >> because > >> we don’t do this today does not mean it’s a good idea to make it > >> impossible in the future. > > > > Note that in 6+ years, we haven't done that :) > > > >> > >> If the problem is that some places use some other glib wrapper as Frediano > >> suggested, then > >> let’s convert these other places to use spice_malloc rather than the other > >> way round. > >> > >> I know that there has been a trend to “de-spicify” and “glibify” things > >> recently. > >> I frankly don’t understand that trend. To me, that’s running a bit > >> backwards. > > > > In the past, spice-server did not have a glib dependency, so it added > > all sort of useful wrappers quite similar to glib. Now that we have a > > glib dependency, keeping them around just seems pointless to me, > > confusing to newcomers ("there must be a difference between the glib > > function and the spice one!!"). > > > >> > >>> > >> I think it always was. Quoting my first response: > >> > >>> I am a bit ambivalent about this kind of source-level replacement. Why > >>> not simply #define spice_malloc to glib_malloc? > >>> > >>> The benefit of doing it that way (in addition to requiring less source > >>> code changes and making following rebases or merge much easier) is that > >>> it leaves the option to instrument spice allocations specifically when > >>> the need arises. > >> > >> Let me stress “In addition to requiring less source code change and making > >> following rebases or merge much easier”. I was really talking about that > >> from the very beginning. > > > > I read it as "let's do s/free/spice_free/, one nice side-effect is that > > it means less code changes/rebase issues/...", rather than "I'm really > > concerned about the impact on rebases these patches are going to have". > > In the latter case, one possible option is to drop the patch series, in > > the former case, the suggestion is to change it :) > > If that was not clear, my suggestion was rather to change it. > > > > Christophe I think this is a matter of style and as such just different opinions. Considering the current mixed style I would proposed a poll. I obviously vote for moving to GLib functions directly. I hope we don't have to vote for having a coherent style in the code. Frediano _______________________________________________ Spice-devel mailing list Spice-devel@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx https://lists.freedesktop.org/mailman/listinfo/spice-devel