Add comments to rewrite_struct_members() describing what it is actually
doing, and reformat/comment the main struct_members regex so that it is
(more) comprehensible to humans.
Reviewed-by: Mauro Carvalho Chehab <mchehab+huawei@kernel.org>
Signed-off-by: Jonathan Corbet <corbet@lwn.net>
---
scripts/lib/kdoc/kdoc_parser.py | 32 +++++++++++++++++++-------------
1 file changed, 19 insertions(+), 13 deletions(-)
diff --git a/scripts/lib/kdoc/kdoc_parser.py b/scripts/lib/kdoc/kdoc_parser.py
index 0c279aa802a0..e3d0270b1a19 100644
--- a/scripts/lib/kdoc/kdoc_parser.py
+++ b/scripts/lib/kdoc/kdoc_parser.py
@@ -647,22 +647,28 @@ class KernelDoc:
return (r.group(1), r.group(3), r.group(2))
return None
+ #
+ # Rewrite the members of a structure or union for easier formatting later on.
+ # Among other things, this function will turn a member like:
+ #
+ # struct { inner_members; } foo;
+ #
+ # into:
+ #
+ # struct foo; inner_members;
+ #
def rewrite_struct_members(self, members):
- # Split nested struct/union elements
- #
- # This loop was simpler at the original kernel-doc perl version, as
- # while ($members =~ m/$struct_members/) { ... }
- # reads 'members' string on each interaction.
#
- # Python behavior is different: it parses 'members' only once,
- # creating a list of tuples from the first interaction.
+ # Process struct/union members from the most deeply nested outward. The
+ # trick is in the ^{ below - it prevents a match of an outer struct/union
+ # until the inner one has been munged (removing the "{" in the process).
#
- # On other words, this won't get nested structs.
- #
- # So, we need to have an extra loop on Python to override such
- # re limitation.
-
- struct_members = KernRe(r'(struct|union)([^\{\};]+)(\{)([^\{\}]*)(\})([^\{\};]*)(;)')
+ struct_members = KernRe(r'(struct|union)' # 0: declaration type
+ r'([^\{\};]+)' # 1: possible name
+ r'(\{)'
+ r'([^\{\}]*)' # 3: Contents of declaration
+ r'(\})'
+ r'([^\{\};]*)(;)') # 5: Remaining stuff after declaration
tuples = struct_members.findall(members)
while tuples:
for t in tuples:
--
2.50.1