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checkpatch/coding-style: deprecate 80-column warning

Yes, staying withing 80 columns is certainly still _preferred_.  But
it's not the hard limit that the checkpatch warnings imply, and other
concerns can most certainly dominate.

Increase the default limit to 100 characters.  Not because 100
characters is some hard limit either, but that's certainly a "what are
you doing" kind of value and less likely to be about the occasional
slightly longer lines.

Miscellanea:

 - to avoid unnecessary whitespace changes in files, checkpatch will no
   longer emit a warning about line length when scanning files unless
   --strict is also used

 - Add a bit to coding-style about alignment to open parenthesis

Signed-off-by: Joe Perches <joe@perches.com>
Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@linux-foundation.org>
alistair/sunxi64-5.7-dsi
Joe Perches 2020-05-29 16:12:21 -07:00 committed by Linus Torvalds
parent 8fc984aedc
commit bdc48fa11e
2 changed files with 22 additions and 13 deletions

View File

@ -84,15 +84,20 @@ Get a decent editor and don't leave whitespace at the end of lines.
Coding style is all about readability and maintainability using commonly
available tools.
The limit on the length of lines is 80 columns and this is a strongly
preferred limit.
The preferred limit on the length of a single line is 80 columns.
Statements longer than 80 columns will be broken into sensible chunks, unless
exceeding 80 columns significantly increases readability and does not hide
information. Descendants are always substantially shorter than the parent and
are placed substantially to the right. The same applies to function headers
with a long argument list. However, never break user-visible strings such as
printk messages, because that breaks the ability to grep for them.
Statements longer than 80 columns should be broken into sensible chunks,
unless exceeding 80 columns significantly increases readability and does
not hide information.
Descendants are always substantially shorter than the parent and are
are placed substantially to the right. A very commonly used style
is to align descendants to a function open parenthesis.
These same rules are applied to function headers with a long argument list.
However, never break user-visible strings such as printk messages because
that breaks the ability to grep for them.
3) Placing Braces and Spaces

View File

@ -51,7 +51,7 @@ my %ignore_type = ();
my @ignore = ();
my $help = 0;
my $configuration_file = ".checkpatch.conf";
my $max_line_length = 80;
my $max_line_length = 100;
my $ignore_perl_version = 0;
my $minimum_perl_version = 5.10.0;
my $min_conf_desc_length = 4;
@ -97,9 +97,11 @@ Options:
--types TYPE(,TYPE2...) show only these comma separated message types
--ignore TYPE(,TYPE2...) ignore various comma separated message types
--show-types show the specific message type in the output
--max-line-length=n set the maximum line length, if exceeded, warn
--max-line-length=n set the maximum line length, (default $max_line_length)
if exceeded, warn on patches
requires --strict for use with --file
--min-conf-desc-length=n set the min description length, if shorter, warn
--tab-size=n set the number of spaces for tab (default 8)
--tab-size=n set the number of spaces for tab (default $tabsize)
--root=PATH PATH to the kernel tree root
--no-summary suppress the per-file summary
--mailback only produce a report in case of warnings/errors
@ -3240,8 +3242,10 @@ sub process {
if ($msg_type ne "" &&
(show_type("LONG_LINE") || show_type($msg_type))) {
WARN($msg_type,
"line over $max_line_length characters\n" . $herecurr);
my $msg_level = \&WARN;
$msg_level = \&CHK if ($file);
&{$msg_level}($msg_type,
"line length of $length exceeds $max_line_length columns\n" . $herecurr);
}
}