Fam Zheng <f...@redhat.com> writes: > On Sat, 02/04 14:35, Markus Armbruster wrote: >> Fam Zheng <f...@redhat.com> writes: >> >> > On Thu, 02/02 20:42, Markus Armbruster wrote: >> >> === Comparison === >> >> >> >> In my opinion, dotted keys are weird and ugly, but at least they don't >> >> add to the quoting mess. Structured values look better, except when >> >> they do add to the quoting mess. >> >> >> >> I'm having a hard time deciding which one I like less :) >> >> >> >> Opinions? Other ideas? >> > >> > Here's my poor attempt: >> > >> > The dotted syntax, as the simpler of two, can cover everyday use very >> > well. If >> > we introduce an "@reference" extension to it which can help the >> > expresiveness, >> > we can have a hybrid solution. It's not the cleanest interface and syntax, >> > but >> > escaping, nesting and quoting can all be divide-and-conqured in their >> > optimal way. >> > What I'm imagining is something like: >> > >> > -json "id=children0,text=[ >> > { 'driver': 'null-co://' }, >> > { 'driver': 'null-co://' }, >> > { 'driver': 'null-co://' } >> > ]" \ >> > -dot \ >> > >> > id=quorum0,driver=quorum,read-pattern=fifo,vote-threshold=1,children=@children0 >> > \ >> > -drive if=virtio,id=primary-disk0,driver=qcow2,file=@quorum0 >> > >> > IOW "-json" and "-dot" define options that is intended to be referenced >> > from >> > other dotted keys (quorum0 uses children0, and in turn primary-disk0 uses >> > quorum0). >> > >> > Note: "-dot" here could be replaced with a -blockdev in this specific case >> > but >> > I'm demostrating it just in case it is useful generically. >> > >> > Fam >> >> KEY=@REF for references creates the same issue as KEY=[VALUE,...] for >> arrays: you need to know the type of KEY to decide whether @REF is a >> reference or a string, unless we outlaw strings starting with '@'. >> >> Not a show-stopper, but it does preclude a design where a simple parser >> feeds into a type-aware visitor, which is how the JSON -> QObject -> >> QAPI pipeline works. >> >> If you get creative in the VALUE part, you complicate the parser and/or >> need to add quoting. >> >> If you get creative in the KEY part, you need to restrict valid names. > > How about KEY@=REF?
Requires outlawing KEYs ending with '@'. QAPI outlaws such names already. QOM doesn't, but I figure no such names exist so far.