Currently the ad7606 driver prints a error message to the kernel log when
an application writes an invalid value to a sysfs attribute. While for
initial driver development and testing this might be useful it is quite
disadvantageous in a production environment. The write() call to the sysfs
attribute will already return an error if the value was invalid so the
application is aware that the operation failed. And generally speaking it
is impossible for an application to reliably match a log message in the
kernel log to a specific operation it performed, so the message becomes
just noise and might distract from more critical messages.
Signed-off-by: Lars-Peter Clausen <lars@metafoo.de>
Signed-off-by: Jonathan Cameron <jic23@kernel.org>
if (ret)
return ret;
- if (!(lval == 5000 || lval == 10000)) {
- dev_err(dev, "range is not supported\n");
+ if (!(lval == 5000 || lval == 10000))
return -EINVAL;
- }
+
mutex_lock(&indio_dev->mlock);
gpio_set_value(st->pdata->gpio_range, lval == 10000);
st->range = lval;
if (val2)
return -EINVAL;
ret = ad7606_oversampling_get_index(val);
- if (ret < 0) {
- dev_err(st->dev, "oversampling %d is not supported\n",
- val);
+ if (ret < 0)
return ret;
- }
mutex_lock(&indio_dev->mlock);
gpio_set_value(st->pdata->gpio_os0, (ret >> 0) & 1);