Jesse Pollard wrote:
> > But one thing XML provides (potentially) is a DTD that defines meanings and formats.
> > IMHO the kernel needs something like this for /proc (though not in DTD format!).
> >
> > Has anyone ever tried to write a formal syntax for all the entries
> > in /proc? We have bits and pieces of /proc documentation in
> > /usr/src/linux/Documentation, but nothing you could feed directly
> > into a parser generator. It'd be neat to have a good definition for /proc
> > in the LSB, and have an LSB conformance test that could look in
> > /proc and say "Yup, all the entries there conform to the spec and can
> > be parsed properly."...
>
> From one point of view (that of the /proc entries...) each file
> is by definition in the proper format. That format is specified
> (in the /proc interface to the driver). Using "proc_printf" is a
> specification for the output.
When two different distributions ship different forks of
the kernel source, which differ in the arguments passed to proc_printf,
which one is right?
There's no way to tell. That's why saying "the source is the spec" doesn't cut it.
Also, the source is not a specification a parser generator can use.
A formal spec for /proc entries maintained by e.g. the LSB is needed;
it has to be separate from the source code (to avoid forking problems),
and it should be machine-readable (so we can build parsers from it).
> That DOES NOT mean that no improvements are possible. If the formats
> used by the various modules/drivers has some variation in format from
> access to acess, then the determination of that format must also be
> included. From what I've seen (via "cat /proc/....") the files all
> have a fixed format. Sometimes the number of entries varies, but then
> the count should ALSO be included in the file (in a known place of
> course). The multi-entry files I've looked at (/proc/net) reach the
> EOF to end the list. This is not unreasonable.
Yeah, there's a general style that seems to work; it just needs to be
formalized.
> I'm not sure of the usefullness of the title lines that are printed. If
> looked at in raw form, yes the titles are nice. But the utilities
> that are aimed at examining the values should not have to discard them, nor
> should the drivers have to generate them.
I think they're good; they're a little bit like the XML tags you're proposing.
> I can live with them anyway, since they are already there.....
>
> The biggest problem I know of is being able to retrieve structure
> in an atomic manner. Not easy (in any system, not just Linux).
Something SNMP doesn't deal well with, either. People seem to cope,
though.
- Dan
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This archive was generated by hypermail 2b29 : Mon Apr 30 2001 - 21:00:14 EST