On 20/01/2017 08:34, Markus Armbruster wrote:
> Eric Blake <ebl...@redhat.com> writes:
> 
>> On 01/19/2017 04:11 PM, Michael S. Tsirkin wrote:
>>
>>>>> +#define QEMU_IS_ARRAY(x) (!__builtin_types_compatible_p(typeof(x), \
>>>>> +                                                        typeof(&(x)[0])))
>>>>>  #ifndef ARRAY_SIZE
>>>>> -#define ARRAY_SIZE(x) (sizeof(x) / sizeof((x)[0]))
>>>>> +#define ARRAY_SIZE(x) ((sizeof(x) / sizeof((x)[0])) + \
>>>>> +                       QEMU_BUILD_BUG_ON_ZERO(!QEMU_IS_ARRAY(x)))
>>>>
>>>> We've got some double-negation going on here ("cause a build bug if the
>>>> negation of QEMU_IS_ARRAY() is not 0") which takes some mental
>>>> gymnastics, but it is the correct result.  [I kind of like that gnulib
>>>> uses positive logic in its 'verify(x)' meaning "verify that x is true,
>>>> or cause a build error"; compared to the negative logic in the kernal
>>>> 'BUILD_BUG_ON[_ZERO](x)' meaning "cause a build bug if x is non-zero" -
>>>> but that's personal preference and not something for qemu to change]
>>>
>>> I can rename QEMU_IS_ARRAY to QEMU_IS_PTR and reverse the logic - would
>>> this be preferable?
>>
>> No, that's worse. As written, "cause a build bug if x is not an array"
>> is easier than "cause a build bug if x is a pointer", because now you
>> are missing an implicit "(instead of the intended array)".  Keep it the
>> way you have it.  I guess it's the _ZERO as a suffix that's throwing me;
>> a better name might have been QEMU_ZERO_OR_BUILD_BUG_ON(x) ("give me a
>> zero expression, or a build bug if x is non-zero") rather than
>> QEMU_BUILD_BUG_ON_ZERO (my first read was "give me a build bug if x is
>> zero", but a better read is "give me a build bug if x is not zero, else
>> give me x because it is zero") - but our choice of naming in patch 3/4
>> mirrors the kernel naming, so it's not worth changing.
> 
> Two ways to skin the assertion cat:
> 
>     assert must_be_true
>     bug_on must_be_false
> 
> The C language picks the first one, both with assert() and with C11's
> _Static_assert().  I'd prefer we stick to that, but I'm not asking you
> to change your series.

We should probably change it to QEMU_STATIC_ASSERT and
QEMU_STATIC_ASSERT_VALUE, but that shouldn't be in this series.

Paolo

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