Tom Lane wrote: > The main problem I see with "pgindent early and often" is that it only > works well if everyone is using exactly the same pgindent code (and > exactly the same typedef list). Otherwise you just get buried in > useless whitespace diffs. > > It's bad enough that Bruce whacks around his copy from time to time :-(. > I would say that the single greatest annoyance for maintaining our back > branches is that patches tend to not back-patch cleanly, and well over > half the time it's because of random reformatting done by pgindent > to code that hadn't changed at all, but it had formatted differently > the prior year.
I hate to say it but pgindent formatting changes are usually made in cases where you or the community want pgindent to improve its indenting. :-) So we improve pgindent but pay for it in backpatching difficulties. :-( > I guess an advantage of maintaining our own fork is that there'd be Only > One True pgindent, thereby alleviating that problem; but I'm still not > eager to go there. If we were going to do it, I'd really wish that we > could standardize on a version that didn't need a typedef list. The I don't think that is possible. GNU indent 2.2.9 requires the same -T option: You must use the -T option to tell indent the name of all the type names in your program that are defined by typedef. -T can be specified more than once, and all names specified are used. For example, if your program contains typedef unsigned long CODE_ADDR; typedef enum {red, blue, green} COLOR; you would use the options -T CODE_ADDR -T COLOR astyle doesn't seem to require it but perhaps it just mishandles them. As I remember there isn't anything about the C grammar that can tell identify a typedef when it needs to. > But in any case, this is all focusing on trivialities. The stuff > pgindent can fix is, by definition, stuff that committers don't really > have to worry about during patch review. The stuff I'm worried about > is at a higher level than that. Agreed. Reformatting is small compared to understanding the patch, adjusting in the comments, testing, documentation, etc. -- Bruce Momjian <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> http://momjian.us EnterpriseDB http://enterprisedb.com + If your life is a hard drive, Christ can be your backup. + -- Sent via pgsql-hackers mailing list (pgsql-hackers@postgresql.org) To make changes to your subscription: http://www.postgresql.org/mailpref/pgsql-hackers