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-rw-r--r--include/qapi/error.h52
1 files changed, 46 insertions, 6 deletions
diff --git a/include/qapi/error.h b/include/qapi/error.h
index 6d079c5..2c189ab 100644
--- a/include/qapi/error.h
+++ b/include/qapi/error.h
@@ -15,6 +15,33 @@
/*
* Error reporting system loosely patterned after Glib's GError.
*
+ * = Rules =
+ *
+ * - Functions that use Error to report errors have an Error **errp
+ * parameter. It should be the last parameter, except for functions
+ * taking variable arguments.
+ *
+ * - You may pass NULL to not receive the error, &error_abort to abort
+ * on error, &error_fatal to exit(1) on error, or a pointer to a
+ * variable containing NULL to receive the error.
+ *
+ * - Separation of concerns: the function is responsible for detecting
+ * errors and failing cleanly; handling the error is its caller's
+ * job. Since the value of @errp is about handling the error, the
+ * function should not examine it.
+ *
+ * - On success, the function should not touch *errp. On failure, it
+ * should set a new error, e.g. with error_setg(errp, ...), or
+ * propagate an existing one, e.g. with error_propagate(errp, ...).
+ *
+ * - Whenever practical, also return a value that indicates success /
+ * failure. This can make the error checking more concise, and can
+ * avoid useless error object creation and destruction. Note that
+ * we still have many functions returning void. We recommend
+ * • bool-valued functions return true on success / false on failure,
+ * • pointer-valued functions return non-null / null pointer, and
+ * • integer-valued functions return non-negative / negative.
+ *
* = Creating errors =
*
* Create an error:
@@ -95,14 +122,13 @@
* Create a new error and pass it to the caller:
* error_setg(errp, "situation normal, all fouled up");
*
- * Call a function and receive an error from it:
- * Error *err = NULL;
- * foo(arg, &err);
- * if (err) {
+ * Call a function, receive an error from it, and pass it to the caller
+ * - when the function returns a value that indicates failure, say
+ * false:
+ * if (!foo(arg, errp)) {
* handle the error...
* }
- *
- * Receive an error and pass it on to the caller:
+ * - when it does not, say because it is a void function:
* Error *err = NULL;
* foo(arg, &err);
* if (err) {
@@ -120,6 +146,20 @@
* foo(arg, errp);
* for readability.
*
+ * Receive an error, and handle it locally
+ * - when the function returns a value that indicates failure, say
+ * false:
+ * Error *err = NULL;
+ * if (!foo(arg, &err)) {
+ * handle the error...
+ * }
+ * - when it does not, say because it is a void function:
+ * Error *err = NULL;
+ * foo(arg, &err);
+ * if (err) {
+ * handle the error...
+ * }
+ *
* Receive and accumulate multiple errors (first one wins):
* Error *err = NULL, *local_err = NULL;
* foo(arg, &err);