Peter Xu <pet...@redhat.com> writes: > On Tue, Aug 16, 2016 at 08:17:08PM +0800, Peter Xu wrote: >> > > >> > > Also, please make it a function, not a macro: >> > > >> > > void error_report_fatal(const char *fmt, ...) >> > > { >> > > va_list ap; >> > > >> > > va_start(ap, fmt); >> > > error_vreport(fmt, ap); >> > > va_end(ap); >> > > exit(1); >> > > } > > Marcel (and reviewers), > > Now if we are having both error_report_fatal() and > error_report_abort(), we'll write error_report() three times if we all > take them as functions.
Yes, but all we duplicate is the usual var-arg boilerplate. > How about we still use macro this time but leverage error_setg() > macro as mentioned by Fam, like: > > +#define error_report_fatal(...) error_setg(&error_fatal, __VA_ARGS__) > +#define error_report_abort(...) error_setg(&error_abort, __VA_ARGS__) > > In this case, we avoided calling exit() directly in the macro, and is > much cleaner than writting error_report() content for three times. I'm afraid that destroys the layering. Currently, Error objects (util/error.c) use error reporting (util/qemu-error.c), but not vice versa. Their headers (include/qapi/error.h and include/qemu/error-report.h) are idependent. I like it that way.