Re: kernel coding style for if ... else which cross #ifdef

From: Tom Spink
Date: Sat May 24 2008 - 12:42:22 EST


2008/5/24 Tom Spink <tspink@xxxxxxxxx>:
> 2008/5/24 Jeremy Fitzhardinge <jeremy@xxxxxxxx>:
>> Vegard Nossum wrote:
>>>
>>> Why not use all-lowercase config_* names? It seems elegant, and fits
>>> in with the notion that these are to be used not as macros, but as
>>> ordinary constants.
>>>
>>
>> We tend to use all caps for symbolic constants, even if they're enums.
>>
>>> (The only disadvantage I can see is that they will stand out less. But
>>> I don't know how great the disadvantage is.)
>>>
>>> You could even go further and make them real constants, something
>>> along the lines of:
>>>
>>> enum config_value { no, yes, mod };
>>>
>>> static const enum config_value config_lockdep_support = yes;
>>>
>>
>> Well, you could use "enum { config_foo = 0/1 }" to define a proper C
>> constant.
>>
>> But it means you could only use them in C, not in CPP or asm expressions.
>>
>> J
>
> Hi,
>
> A thought occurred to me that we may be able to used some preprocessor
> magic and do this:
>
> #define config_defined(x) CFGVAL_## x
>
> Which means that, if we get Kconfig to produce:
>
> #define CFGVAL_CONFIG_FOO 0
> #define CFGVAL_CONFIG_VALUE_BAR 1
> #define CFGVAL_CONFIG_VALUE_BAZ_MODULE 1
>
> We can use this:
>
> if (config_defined(CONFIG_FOO) && some_expr) {
> panic("Oh no.");
> }
>
> Thoughts?
>
> --
> Tom Spink
>

There's a wee typo on the #define lines there:

> #define CFGVAL_CONFIG_FOO 0
> #define CFGVAL_CONFIG_VALUE_BAR 1
> #define CFGVAL_CONFIG_VALUE_BAZ_MODULE 1

I, of course, meant:

#define CFGVAL_CONFIG_FOO 0
#define CFGVAL_CONFIG_BAR 1
#define CFGVAL_CONFIG_BAZ_MODULE 1

--
Tom Spink
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