Mangling with #defines is not nice, as we may end removing
the macro names, preventing several macros from being properly
documented.

Also, on defines, we have something like:

        #define foo(a1, a2, a3, ...)                     \
                /* some real implementation */

The prototype part (first line on this example) won't contain
any macros, so no need to apply any regexes on it.

With that, move the apply_transforms() logic to ensure that
it will be called only on functions.

Signed-off-by: Mauro Carvalho Chehab <[email protected]>
Acked-by: Randy Dunlap <[email protected]>
Tested-by: Randy Dunlap <[email protected]>
---
 tools/lib/python/kdoc/kdoc_parser.py | 12 +++++++-----
 1 file changed, 7 insertions(+), 5 deletions(-)

diff --git a/tools/lib/python/kdoc/kdoc_parser.py 
b/tools/lib/python/kdoc/kdoc_parser.py
index 0b68b140cd02..3ba2cda2487a 100644
--- a/tools/lib/python/kdoc/kdoc_parser.py
+++ b/tools/lib/python/kdoc/kdoc_parser.py
@@ -163,7 +163,7 @@ struct_nested_prefixes = [
 #
 # Transforms for function prototypes
 #
-function_xforms  = [
+function_xforms = [
     (KernRe(r"^static +"), ""),
     (KernRe(r"^extern +"), ""),
     (KernRe(r"^asmlinkage +"), ""),
@@ -1065,10 +1065,7 @@ class KernelDoc:
         found = func_macro = False
         return_type = ''
         decl_type = 'function'
-        #
-        # Apply the initial transformations.
-        #
-        prototype = apply_transforms(function_xforms, prototype)
+
         #
         # If we have a macro, remove the "#define" at the front.
         #
@@ -1087,6 +1084,11 @@ class KernelDoc:
                 declaration_name = r.group(1)
                 func_macro = True
                 found = True
+        else:
+            #
+            # Apply the initial transformations.
+            #
+            prototype = apply_transforms(function_xforms, prototype)
 
         # Yes, this truly is vile.  We are looking for:
         # 1. Return type (may be nothing if we're looking at a macro)
-- 
2.52.0


Reply via email to