checkpatch: Enforce proper do/while (0) style

Use of a loop construct for code that is not intended to repeat
does not make much idiomatic sense, except in one place: it is a
common usage in macros in order to wrap arbitrary code with
single-statement semantics.  But when used in a macro, it is more
typical for the caller to supply the trailing ';' when calling
the macro.

Although qemu coding style frowns on bare:
  if (cond)
    statement1;
  else
    statement2;
where extra semicolons actually cause syntax errors, we still
want our macro styles to be easily copied to other projects.
Thus, declare it an error if we encounter any form of 'while (0)'
with a semicolon in the same line.

Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
Message-Id: <20171201232433.25193-8-eblake@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Paolo Bonzini <pbonzini@redhat.com>
master
Eric Blake 2017-12-01 17:24:33 -06:00 committed by Paolo Bonzini
parent 2562755ee7
commit f4bdc13e49
1 changed files with 5 additions and 0 deletions

View File

@ -1622,6 +1622,11 @@ sub process {
}
}
# 'do ... while (0/false)' only makes sense in macros, without trailing ';'
if ($line =~ /while\s*\((0|false)\);/) {
ERROR("suspicious ; after while (0)\n" . $herecurr);
}
# Check relative indent for conditionals and blocks.
if ($line =~ /\b(?:(?:if|while|for)\s*\(|do\b)/ && $line !~ /^.\s*#/ && $line !~ /\}\s*while\s*/) {
my ($s, $c) = ($stat, $cond);