On Tue, 05/20 13:13, Eric Blake wrote: > On 05/20/2014 03:07 AM, Fam Zheng wrote: > > Please first take a look at patch 7 to see what is supported by this series. > > > > Patch 1 ~ 3 allows some useful basic types in schema. > > > > Patch 4 ~ 6 implements the new syntax. > > > > Note: The introduced '@arg' sigil, just like the preexisting '*arg', is > > reducing the cleanness of the syntax. We should get rid of both of them in > > long > > term. Here, this series compromises on this and introduces '@arg' because: > > > > - We have to distinguish the argument property dictionary from nested > > struct: > > > > I.e.: > > > > 'data': { > > 'arg1': { 'member1': 'int', 'member2': 'str' } > > '@arg2': { 'type': 'int', 'default': 100 } > > } > > > > Until we completely drop and forbid the 'arg1' nested struct use case. > > > > - Forbidding 'arg1' it's doable, but doing it now means we pull in many > > distractive patches to this series. > > Question - since we WANT to get rid of nested struct, why not reverse > the sense? Mark all existing nested structs (weren't there just three > that we found?) with the '@' sigil, and let the new syntax be > sigil-free. Then when we clean up the nesting, we are also getting rid > of the bad syntax, plus the sigil gives us something to search for in > knowing how much to clean up. But if you stick the sigil on the new > code, instead of the obsolete code, then as more and more places in the > schema use defaults, it gets harder and harder to remove the use of the > sigil even if the nested structs are eventually removed. >
It makes not much difference I can see. The hard part is actaully dropping nested, converting from sigil <-> non-sigil is easy. Of course, nothing is seriously hard, there are only three nested structs plus some more qapi-schema test code. A question before that is, if we are determined to drop '@' sigil (whether from nested or property dict), are we as determined to drop '*' sigil as well? Fam