On Wed, 13 Dec 2023, Reinette Chatre wrote:

> Hi Ilpo,
> 
> On 12/11/2023 4:17 AM, Ilpo Järvinen wrote:
> > The resctrl selftest code contains a number of perror() calls. Some of
> > them come with hash character and some don't. The kselftest framework
> > provides ksft_perror() that is compatible with test output formatting
> > so it should be used instead of adding custom hash signs.
> > 
> > Some perror() calls are too far away from anything that sets error.
> > For those call sites, ksft_print_msg() must be used instead.
> > 
> > Convert perror() to ksft_perror() or ksft_print_msg().
> > 
> > Other related changes:
> > - Remove hash signs
> > - Remove trailing stops & newlines from ksft_perror()
> > - Add terminating newlines for converted ksft_print_msg()
> > - Use consistent capitalization
> > 
> 
> Another great cleanup. Also thanks for fixing some non-sensical messages.
> 
> ...
> 
> > @@ -149,7 +149,7 @@ int cat_perf_miss_val(int cpu_no, int n, char 
> > *cache_type)
> >     param.num_of_runs = 0;
> >  
> >     if (pipe(pipefd)) {
> > -           perror("# Unable to create pipe");
> > +           ksft_perror("Unable to create pipe");
> >             return errno;
> >     }
> >  
> > @@ -185,7 +185,7 @@ int cat_perf_miss_val(int cpu_no, int n, char 
> > *cache_type)
> >                      * Just print the error message.
> >                      * Let while(1) run and wait for itself to be killed.
> >                      */
> > -                   perror("# failed signaling parent process");
> > +                   ksft_perror("Failed signaling parent process");
> >  
> 
> Partial writes are not actually errors and it cannot be expected that errno 
> be set
> in these cases. In these cases I think ksft_print_msg() would be more 
> appropriate.

I can change those to use print instead although I don't think these will
fail for other reasons than a real error as the pipe should be empty and 
only single byte is written to it.

> >             if (fprintf(fp, "Pid: %d \t Mem_BW_iMC: %f \t Mem_BW_resc: %lu 
> > \t Difference: %lu\n",
> >                         bm_pid, bw_imc, bw_resc, diff) <= 0) {
> > +                   ksft_perror("Could not log results");
> >                     fclose(fp);
> > -                   perror("Could not log results.");
> >  
> >                     return errno;
> 
> >From what I can tell fprintf() does not set errno on error. Perhaps this
> should rather be ksft_print_msg()?

Oh, what a stupid gotcha in libc. I just assumed it does set errno without 
even checking... because why it wouldn't follow the custom. ...It seems 
nothing can be relied on :-/.

-- 
 i.

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