Re: [PATCH v1] iio: magnetometer: ak8974: Silence deferred-probe error

From: Linus Walleij
Date: Thu Apr 16 2020 - 12:52:15 EST


On Thu, Apr 16, 2020 at 4:45 PM Dmitry Osipenko <digetx@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:
> 16.04.2020 14:33, Linus Walleij ÐÐÑÐÑ:

> > This misses some important aspects of dev_dbg(), notably this:
> >
> > #if defined(CONFIG_DYNAMIC_DEBUG)
> > #define dev_dbg(dev, fmt, ...) \
> > dynamic_dev_dbg(dev, dev_fmt(fmt), ##__VA_ARGS__)
> > #elif defined(DEBUG)
> > #define dev_dbg(dev, fmt, ...) \
> > dev_printk(KERN_DEBUG, dev, dev_fmt(fmt), ##__VA_ARGS__)
> > #else
> > #define dev_dbg(dev, fmt, ...) \
> > ({ \
> > if (0) \
> > dev_printk(KERN_DEBUG, dev, dev_fmt(fmt), ##__VA_ARGS__); \
> > })
> > #endif
> >
> > If DEBUG is not defined the entire dev_dbg() message is enclodes in if (0)
> > and compiled out of the kernel, saving space. The above does not
> > fulfil that.
>
> Hello Linus,
>
> After some recent discussions in regards to the EPROBE_DEFER handling,
> Thierry Reding suggested the form which is used in my patch and we
> started to use it recently in the Tegra DRM driver [1]. The reason is
> that we don't want to miss any deferred-probe messages under any
> circumstances, for example like in a case of a disabled DYNAMIC_DEBUG.

I have a hard time to accept this reasoning.

Who doesn't feel that way about their subsystem? If you don't want
to miss the message under any circumstances then use dev_info().
Don't override the default behaviour of dev_dbg().

> The debug messages are usually disabled in a release-build and when not
> a very experienced person hands you KMSG for diagnosing a problem, the
> KMSG is pretty much useless if error is hidden silently.

So use dev_info().

> By moving the message to a debug level, we reduce the noise in the KMSG
> because usually people look for a bold-red error messages. Secondly, we
> don't introduce an additional overhead to the kernel size since the same
> text is reused for all error conditions.

dev_info() is not supposed to be an error message, it is supposed to
be information, so use that.

Yours,
Linus Walleij