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Full Discussion: How does NORET_TYPE works ?
Operating Systems Linux How does NORET_TYPE works ? Post 302161578 by amit4g on Friday 25th of January 2008 05:30:45 AM
Old 01-25-2008
How does NORET_TYPE works ?

Hi,

I was looking at the panic() code in linux kernel which is defined as:
51 /**
52 * panic - halt the system
53 * @fmt: The text string to print
54 *
55 * Display a message, then perform cleanups.
56 *
57 * This function never returns.
58 */
59
60 NORET_TYPE void panic(const char * fmt, ...)

where, NORET_TYPE is declared as
/*
753 * Ok, these declarations are also in <linux/kernel.h> but none of the
754 * ext3 source programs needs to include it so they are duplicated here.
755 */

# define NORET_TYPE /**/ <====

Please help me in understanding a #defined variable(NORET_TYPE here) which is not defined to anything.
I know that panic() function was designed in this way to not to return anything{in case of panic,there won't be anyone to catch the return value from panic() },but how does this work.
i think a program in user land having a #defined variable which is left blank will throw compile time error.how this is implemented in linux kernel ?
I don't know much about C,hence please excuse me if this is a stupid querry .

~amit
 

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KASSERT(9)						   BSD Kernel Developer's Manual						KASSERT(9)

NAME
KASSERT, KASSERTMSG, KDASSERT, KDASSERTMSG -- kernel expression verification macros SYNOPSIS
void KASSERT(expression); void KASSERTMSG(expression, format, ...); void KDASSERT(expression); void KDASSERTMSG(expression, format, ...); DESCRIPTION
These machine independent assertion-checking macros cause a kernel panic(9) if the given expression evaluates to false. Two compile-time options(4) define the behavior of the checks. 1. The KASSERT() and KASSERTMSG() tests are included only in kernels compiled with the DIAGNOSTIC configuration option. In a kernel that does not have this configuration option, the macros are defined to be no-ops. 2. The KDASSERT() and KDASSERTMSG() tests are included only in kernels compiled with the DEBUG configuration option. The KDASSERT() and KASSERT() macros are identical except for the controlling option (DEBUG vs DIAGNOSTIC). Basically, KASSERT() should be used for light-weight checks and KDASSERT() should be used for heavier ones. Callers should not rely on the side effects of expression because, depending on the kernel compile options mentioned above, expression might not be evaluated at all. The panic message will display the style of assertion (debugging vs. diagnostic), the expression that failed and the filename, and line num- ber the failure happened on. The KASSERTMSG() and KDASSERTMSG() macros append to the panic(9) format string the message specified by format and its subsequent arguments, similar to printf(9) functions. SEE ALSO
config(1), options(4), CTASSERT(9), panic(9), printf(9) AUTHORS
These macros were written by Chris G. Demetriou <cgd@netbsd.org>. BSD
September 27, 2011 BSD
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