On Sat, 2007-08-04 at 18:47 +0200, Jean Delvare wrote: > On 8/4/2007, "Jan Engelhardt" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > >Ugh. What do we have printk for then? I do not like this. > >For pr_debug() it makes sense because its semantics change with > >-DDEBUG and -UDEBUG, but for these pr_()s it does not seem so. > I think I agree with Jan here, I see no fundamental need for these > additional macros. But if they are really added, then they should follow > the same standard as pr_debug() and pr_info(), that is: no "\n" added > automatically. Otherwise this will become quite messy.
2 reasons: This change will eventually isolate multiple line printk messages and allow easier insertion of printk_block_start printks printk_block_end so that multiple line messages are kept together in the message logs. and I've done tree-wide patches for single line printk(KERN_\(emerg|alert|notice|crit\), (about 2000) and fixed several dozen lines without \n or things like "KERN_<level> /n msg" Here's the perl script I used. It's imperfect of course. There are comments with embedded semicolons where it fails, and #defines aren't substituted too well. if ($#ARGV < 2) { print "usage: KERN_<level> pr_<level> files...\n"; exit; } for ($i=2; $i <= $#ARGV; $i++) { PrintkSearchReplace($ARGV[$i], $ARGV[0], $ARGV[1]); } sub PrintkSearchReplace{ my($file, $search, $replace) = @_; my $orig = ""; local($/); open(my $fh, $file) or die "File not found '$file'\n"; $orig = <$fh>; close(my $fh); my $parts = $orig; my $whole = ""; @segments = split(/\;/, $parts); foreach $line (@segments) { if ($whole ne "") { $whole = $whole . "\;"; } my $origline = $line; if ($line =~ m/\bprintk\s*\(\s*${search}\s*.*\".*\\n\s*\"/ms) { $line =~ s/\bprintk\s*\(\s*${search}\s*([^\"]*)\"/${replace}\(\1\"/ms; $line =~ s/\\n\s*\"\s*/\"/ms; print "${file}: changed:\n" . $origline . "\;" . "\nto:\n" . $line . "\;" . "\n" ; } $whole = $whole . $line; } if ($orig ne $whole) { open(my $fh, ">${file}") or die "Could not open '$file'\n"; print $fh $whole; close(my $fh); } } - To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-kernel" in the body of a message to [EMAIL PROTECTED] More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html Please read the FAQ at http://www.tux.org/lkml/