Re: [for-next][PATCH 02/11] tracing: Add __cpumask to denote a trace event field that is a cpumask_t
From: Douglas Raillard
Date: Tue Dec 13 2022 - 14:50:33 EST
On 13-12-2022 14:20, Douglas Raillard wrote:
The only case I can think of where parsing would not follow regular C abstract declaration syntax is a type like that:
__data_loc int [3][]
After some experimentation, I came to the conclusion that "__data_loc <type> [] <id>" can indeed support any C type if they
need to be added in the future. I would heavily suggest that any future extension works as the following, to avoid messing up
the grammar in a subtle way that would prevent some types to be expressible, or make it a nightmare to implement.
The recipe to parse that with stock C parser is:
* consume "__data_loc"
* parse "<type> []" as a func prototype parameter declaration
(declaration using an abstract declarator, i.e. not introducing any identifier)
* parse "<id>" as an identifier.
The outer-most array is by definition the dynamic one, so "[]". In normal C, [3] and [] would be swapped as
the outer-most array comes first. That's not too bad though as it is not ambiguous and easy to fixup directly
in the parse tree.
Simply swapping is wrong in the general case. The correct modification of the "<type> []" parse tree is doing a
"barrel shift" on nested array sizes. If the type is "int [1][2][]", it needs to be turned into "int [][1][2]".
The now-top-level sizeless array is the dynamic array. Note that pointers level are transparent,
so "int (*[1])[2][]" needs to be turned into "int (*[])[1][2]"
-- Douglas