[ofa-general] Re: dealing with gcc 'comparison is always false' warnings
Tilman Schmidt
tilman at imap.cc
Wed May 30 12:00:57 PDT 2007
Am 30.05.2007 17:41 schrieb Satyam Sharma:
> On 5/30/07, Roland Dreier <rdreier at cisco.com> wrote:
>> thanks... I'm wondering if there's a consensus among kernel hackers
>> about changes like:
>>
>> > - if (hdr.cmd < 0 || hdr.cmd >= ARRAY_SIZE(ucma_cmd_table))
>> > + if (hdr.cmd >= ARRAY_SIZE(ucma_cmd_table))
>> > return -EINVAL;
>>
>> I understand that new gcc sees that hdr.cmd is unsigned and hence
>> can't be < 0, and generates a warning for that, and having a build
>> cluttered with warnings hides bugs and so on. However the code here
>> looks quite sensible to me -- otherwise we end up with missing range
>> checking if hdr.cmd ever changes to a signed type. This seems like a
>> good way to introduce bugs: delete valid range checking code to shut
>> up a silly gcc warning, and then change the type of a variable.
>
> You're *absolutely* correct about the issue that these "fixes" that remove
> such conditions end up remove range-checking making the code more
> flakey / less readable.
I disagree. Changing the type of a variable is a significant
modification. If someone does that, he or she *must* check every
use of that variable, at which point he or she will also modify
any range checks accordingly. Having checks that don't fit with
the previous type *distracts* from that job. "Oh, did I modify
that part already? Guess I can skip checking the rest of that
function then." Oops.
Nor is readability a suitable argument. Checking if hdr.cmd is
less than zero gives the misleading impression that it *could*
be less than zero, thus *impairing* readability.
jm2c
T.
--
Tilman Schmidt E-Mail: tilman at imap.cc
Bonn, Germany
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