Try/catch for modules?

Anuz Pratap Singh Tomar chambilkethakur at gmail.com
Fri Oct 18 11:47:50 EDT 2019


On Fri, Oct 18, 2019 at 4:44 PM Martin Galvan <omgalvan.86 at gmail.com> wrote:

> El jue., 17 oct. 2019 a las 19:13, Valdis Klētnieks
> (<valdis.kletnieks at vt.edu>) escribió:
> >
> > For starters, the *correct* in-kernel way to deal with this is:
> >         if (!ptr) {
> >                 printk("You blew it!\n");
> >                 goto you_blew_it;
> >         }
>
> goto statements are harmful. In any case, what I meant was to have
> some sort of safety net to prevent exceptions (i.e. if I screw up and
> forget a NULL check) from panicking the system.
>
> Why exactly are goto statements harmful?
Here is Linus's email about goto.
https://koblents.com/Ches/Links/Month-Mar-2013/20-Using-Goto-in-Linux-Kernel-Code/

> Also, "current PID" and "my module" aren't two things that can
> correspond....
>
> I don't understand what you mean by that. Module code (e.g. an ioctl)
> runs as some process. In the case of an ioctl, I'd assume it's the
> same PID of the user process.
>
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-- 
Thank you
Warm Regards
Anuz
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