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Re: [PATCH 1/3 v4] Introduce common/errors.h
- From: Gary Benson <gbenson at redhat dot com>
- To: Doug Evans <dje at google dot com>
- Cc: gdb-patches at sourceware dot org, Pedro Alves <palves at redhat dot com>, Tom Tromey <tromey at redhat dot com>
- Date: Fri, 25 Jul 2014 09:51:34 +0100
- Subject: Re: [PATCH 1/3 v4] Introduce common/errors.h
- Authentication-results: sourceware.org; auth=none
- References: <1406206287-6817-1-git-send-email-gbenson at redhat dot com> <1406206287-6817-2-git-send-email-gbenson at redhat dot com> <21457 dot 17973 dot 551020 dot 113918 at ruffy dot mtv dot corp dot google dot com>
Doug Evans wrote:
> ...it's odd to then not have just one copy of perror_with_name and
> malloc_failure given that their function comment says:
>
> perror_with_name:
> /* A special case of "error" which constructs the error message by ...
>
> and
>
> malloc_failure:
> /* A special case of internal error used to handle memory allocation ...
>
> When I read "special case of ..." the first thing that comes to mind
> is that the function is a utility wrapper around the corresponding
> function, and given that it's not I'm left wondering "Why not?".
[snip]
> So, *if* you want to keep *this* part of the patch basically as-is
> (which is fine by me) I would rephrase this comment to something
> like:
>
> /* Call this function to handle memory allocation failures.
> This function does not return. */
>
> I don't have too strong opinion on the wording. If someone wants a
> different wording, go for it.
I pretty much agree with you 100% here. I wasn't happy with the
comments for either of these, and I'll gladly change them.
> In the case of malloc_failure, it's not really an *internal* error,
No--and certainly not by the description of internal_error earlier in
the file.
> even if in the case of gdb it calls internal_error, though arguably
> it should do something different - it's more of a "fatal". :-)
> Though I'm not suggesting trying to go down that path. :-)
I spoke with Pedro about this in Cambridge. malloc failure is a funny
one: sometimes it's fatal, other times it's not an issue; it depends
entirely on what the memory you were trying to allocate was for.
> It might be possible come up with a name other than "fatal" that
> could apply to both gdb and gdbserver so that malloc_failure could
> call it, but no need to try to do that now.
I don't know if you saw but I removed "fatal" from GDB the other day
(http://tinyurl.com/k6neuwd) so the path is clear to add a "fatal" if
we want one. It would be nice if such a function were smart enough to
work even if called before exceptions and cleanups were set up. It
might be a nice general thing if all error-handling functions worked
that way (error and internal_error could work like gdbserver's "fatal"
if called early.) That might even be a prerequisite to moving
exceptions and cleanups into common code and making gdbserver use
them.
(I'm not planning to do any of this now, this is just thinking aloud!)
Cheers,
Gary
--
http://gbenson.net/