On 09/08/2018 19:03, Peter Maydell wrote: > On 9 August 2018 at 17:43, Paolo Bonzini <pbonz...@redhat.com> wrote: >>> I'm still not used to the leeading-/*-on-it's-own style, >>> so having checkpatch catch my lapses is handy... >> >> ... if it's not what we are using, why enforce it? > > See the enormous long threads on the recent changes to CODING_STYLE: > https://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/qemu-devel/2018-06/msg00696.html > https://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/qemu-devel/2018-06/msg02717.html > > Basically, I wanted to rule out things like > > /* this > weirdness */ > > and lots of other people wanted (a) to not have > > /* this thing > * which I think is fine > */ > > and (b) to consistently define only one format as OK. > > So I accepted having my personal preferred format not being > permitted in order to get consensus on getting rid of the > formats I think are really ugly :-)
This is one of the cases where we are decently consistent: Lone "/*" or "/**": 9986 cases of which in the first column: 7617 of which the first line in the file (license headers): 2834 regex: ^[ \t]*/\*\*?[ \t]*$ "/*" with the first line of the comment: 11246 of which in the first column: 4985 of which the first line in the file: 97 regex: ^[ \t]*/\*\*?+(?:(?!\*/).)+?$ License headers almost always have the "lone /*" format. Apart from license headers, 63% of the comments have the now-deprecated format. Inside functions, 73% of the comments have the now-deprecated format. Outside functions it's 50-50. That's because there are 2024 doc comments, which in turn are 50% of the comments that are 1) outside the functions 2) using a lone "/*". So my proposal, which is actually consistent with what QEMU is doing, is the following: 1) the first line of a file should always be "/*", otherwise warn 2) a comment that starts with "/**" should have it on a lone line 3) every other multiline comment should start with "/*<whitespace><something>" Yes, there is overlap between QEMU and Linux developers, but really only in a few subsystems (s390, pSeries, networking---which uses the "other" comment style), and I don't see why we should pretend that QEMU and Linux use similar coding styles. In fact they couldn't be more different: spaces vs. tabs, indent-4 vs. indent-8, camelcase struct names with typedefs... Basically the only thing that is the same is lowercase for variable names and braces on the same line as the statement. Linux's checkpatch was a useful base not because Linux and QEMU are similar, but only because of the complex expression parsing stuff that really is the same for _any_ sane coding style (even GNU ;)). Paolo