Re: [PATCH] checkpatch: Fix line number reporting

From: Erez Zadok
Date: Tue Oct 16 2007 - 14:01:16 EST


In message <20071015182118.GA4459@xxxxxxxxxxxx>, Andy Whitcroft writes:
> On Sat, Oct 13, 2007 at 02:35:12PM -0400, Erez Zadok wrote:
> > In message <20071012193751.GA31579@xxxxxxxxxxxx>, Andy Whitcroft writes:
> > > On Fri, Oct 12, 2007 at 03:26:54PM -0400, Mike D. Day wrote:
> > > > Fix line number reporting when checking source files (as opposed to
> > > > patches)
> > > >
> > > > Signed-off-by: Mike D. Day <ncmike@xxxxxxxxxx>
> > >
> > > Sorry you've had to fix this about 4 times, mostly because of ongoing
> > > changes, and slow replication getting in the way. I've applied this
> > > and you should find it in -next when replication hits. md5sum is
> > > below of the version with it in, so you can make sure you've got
> > > the right one.
> > >
> > > 54f053c50265e44a6041e3147dc66a69 checkpatch.pl
> > >
> > > -apw
> >
> > Andy, I've tested the --emacs feature in the above latest
> > checkpatch.pl-next. Below is a patch that completes the functionality of
> > the --emacs option: it ensures that only the cc-style error messages are
> > printed, no extra context lines or caret lines, no extra newlines, etc.
> > Although this patch changes every call to a message-producing function, it
> > is a trivial change, and I believe it's the cleanest way to handle the
> > separation between the terse cc-style messages and the verbose default
> > messages. With this patch, I can finally test a single source file as
> > follows:
> >
> > $ ./scripts/checkpatch.pl -q -q --emacs --file path/name/to/file
>
> Ok I don't understand why the rest of the lines are a problem? At least
> with emacs the extra context lines are just ignored right? Are you
> trying to use this as a summary?

Andy,

I'm trying to minimize excess stuff that's not necessarily useful for
everyone, and to match what is done elsewhere. For example, I don't need
those extra newlines and find them a distraction. And if get an error
message such as "put a space after a comma", I don't really need a caret
sign to point to the exact char in the line where it is.

When g/cc prints out errors from a compile, the errors are one per line, w/o
any additional context lines, caret markers, newlines, etc. grep -n does
the same (also useful inside emacs). So I'm just asking for a way to have
the same terse format.

If you feel that the extra info is still useful for some people, then can
you please provide a way for some people like me to turn off the extra lines
(pass a third -q, or a --terse option)?

> -apw

Thanks,
Erez.
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