On 10/3/2017 11:56 AM, adrien.mazarguil at 6wind.com (Adrien Mazarguil) wrote: > On Tue, Oct 03, 2017 at 11:38:13AM +0100, Bruce Richardson wrote: >> On Mon, Oct 02, 2017 at 06:21:06PM +0200, Adrien Mazarguil wrote: >>> On Mon, Oct 02, 2017 at 02:46:24PM +0100, Bruce Richardson wrote: >>>> On Mon, Oct 02, 2017 at 01:53:17PM +0200, Adrien Mazarguil wrote: >>>>> Hi Stephen, >>>>> >>>>> On Fri, Sep 29, 2017 at 08:37:49AM -0700, Stephen Hemminger wrote: >>>>>> The Linux kernel style policy about strings is that strings should >>>>>> be always put on one line. This makes sense since a typical use case >>>>>> is for a user to type the error message into a search engine or >>>>>> grep, and it won't be found if split across lines. This patch just >>>>>> re-enables that check. >>>>>> >>>>>> Yes, lots of DPDK code now splits strings, that doesn't make it >>>>>> right. >>>>>> >>>>>> Signed-off-by: Stephen Hemminger <sthemmin at microsoft.com> --- >>>>>> devtools/checkpatches.sh | 1 - 1 file changed, 1 deletion(-) >>>>>> >>>>>> diff --git a/devtools/checkpatches.sh b/devtools/checkpatches.sh >>>>>> index a56c41a301c0..3e6081dd673e 100755 --- >>>>>> a/devtools/checkpatches.sh +++ b/devtools/checkpatches.sh @@ -44,7 >>>>>> +44,6 @@ options="$options --show-types" options="$options >>>>>> --ignore=LINUX_VERSION_CODE,FILE_PATH_CHANGES,\ >>>>>> VOLATILE,PREFER_PACKED,PREFER_ALIGNED,PREFER_PRINTF,\ >>>>>> PREFER_KERNEL_TYPES,BIT_MACRO,CONST_STRUCT,\ >>>>>> -SPLIT_STRING,LONG_LINE_STRING,\ >>>>>> LINE_SPACING,PARENTHESIS_ALIGNMENT,NETWORKING_BLOCK_COMMENT_STYLE,\ >>>>>> NEW_TYPEDEFS,COMPARISON_TO_NULL" >>>>> >>>>> I'm not sure, given that the main reason for splitting strings in the >>>>> first place is to avoid LONG_LINE_STRING warnings, I think we must >>>>> choose between the two options. If split strings are not allowed, then >>>>> long lines must be. >>>>> >>>>> Since checkpatches.sh is used by various automated scripts to complain >>>>> loudly about problems in submissions, the above change prevents >>>>> maintainers from writing long string at all (can't split and can't go >>>>> past 80 columns). >>>>> >>>>> As a result, they will be tempted to cripple their code with nasty >>>>> workarounds to shut up checkpatches.sh, we don't want that to happen. >>>>> >>>>> Also I think the reasons stated by original commit cf75514c8e2e are >>>>> still relevant. My vote would be to keep things as is. >>>>> >>>> In my experience, checkpatch is smart enough to recognise when a long >>>> line overflows the 80 character limit because of a single long string, >>>> so the two options are not mutually exclusive. In other words, long >>>> lines are not allowed except in the case where shortening the line >>>> involves splitting a string. There may be a small amount of work in >>>> getting checkpatch happy, i.e. by putting the string on a line on it's >>>> own, but we can indeed have our cake and eat it too in this case. >>> >>> I can't seem to get around warnings without ignoring either SPLIT_STRING or >>> LONG_LINE_STRING as of Linux v4.14-rc3's checkpatch.pl. I think you can only >>> get around them by fooling it somehow. You really need to ignore at least >>> LONG_LINE_STRING to meet the requirements of the commit log. >>> >>> However SPLIT_STRING still looks necessary to address part of cf75514c8e2e >>> ("devtools: ignore warning on long log string"): >>> >>> "...lines that make use of PRIx64 with string concatenation will still be >>> flagged if the beginning of the last string fragment begins after the 80 >>> character threshold." >>> >>> It's not all that uncommon in my opinion. >>> >> If you have PRIx64 in it, it's not part of a literal string you would >> grep, so it's reasonable to split there. The user cannot know what the >> specific %x formatting character used is. > > I agree, however in that case checkpatch would complain because our > configuration doesn't specify to ignore SPLIT_STRING since there is no comma > separator when concatenating them. > > My point is that the occasional exception is still necessary for split > strings, that ignoring LONG_LINE_STRING must remain either way and > unnecessary warnings cause more harm than good (they need to be worked > around if we enforce this rule). > > In short, long/split strings acceptability assessment should be left to > reviewers, as it cannot be automated in all cases through checkpatch.pl. >
This patch is waiting in patchwork for a long time now. My experience is same with Adrien's, if 'LONG_LINE_STRING' is not ignored, it will complain about long log messages, so removing 'LONG_LINE_STRING' contradicts with the reason of the patch described in the commit log. Perhaps it can be an option to remove only 'SPLIT_STRING' from ignore list, to detect split messages. But overall, I am updating this patch as "Change Requested", if there is a demand for ignoring 'SPLIT_STRING' please send a new version. Thanks, ferruh