alarmtimer: Use EOPNOTSUPP instead of ENOTSUPP

ENOTSUPP is not supposed to be returned to userspace. This was found on an
OpenPower machine, where the RTC does not support set_alarm.

On that system, a clock_nanosleep(CLOCK_REALTIME_ALARM, ...) results in
"524 Unknown error 524"

Replace it with EOPNOTSUPP which results in the expected "95 Operation not
supported" error.

Fixes: 1c6b39ad3f (alarmtimers: Return -ENOTSUPP if no RTC device is present)
Signed-off-by: Thadeu Lima de Souza Cascardo <cascardo@canonical.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Gleixner <tglx@linutronix.de>
Cc: stable@vger.kernel.org
Link: https://lkml.kernel.org/r/20190903171802.28314-1-cascardo@canonical.com
This commit is contained in:
Thadeu Lima de Souza Cascardo 2019-09-03 14:18:02 -03:00 committed by Thomas Gleixner
parent 3b47fd5ca9
commit f18ddc13af

View File

@ -672,7 +672,7 @@ static int alarm_timer_create(struct k_itimer *new_timer)
enum alarmtimer_type type;
if (!alarmtimer_get_rtcdev())
return -ENOTSUPP;
return -EOPNOTSUPP;
if (!capable(CAP_WAKE_ALARM))
return -EPERM;
@ -790,7 +790,7 @@ static int alarm_timer_nsleep(const clockid_t which_clock, int flags,
int ret = 0;
if (!alarmtimer_get_rtcdev())
return -ENOTSUPP;
return -EOPNOTSUPP;
if (flags & ~TIMER_ABSTIME)
return -EINVAL;