| Copyright 2004 Linus Torvalds |
| Copyright 2004 Pavel Machek <pavel@suse.cz> |
| |
| Using sparse for typechecking |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| "__bitwise" is a type attribute, so you have to do something like this: |
| |
| typedef int __bitwise pm_request_t; |
| |
| enum pm_request { |
| PM_SUSPEND = (__force pm_request_t) 1, |
| PM_RESUME = (__force pm_request_t) 2 |
| }; |
| |
| which makes PM_SUSPEND and PM_RESUME "bitwise" integers (the "__force" is |
| there because sparse will complain about casting to/from a bitwise type, |
| but in this case we really _do_ want to force the conversion). And because |
| the enum values are all the same type, now "enum pm_request" will be that |
| type too. |
| |
| And with gcc, all the __bitwise/__force stuff goes away, and it all ends |
| up looking just like integers to gcc. |
| |
| Quite frankly, you don't need the enum there. The above all really just |
| boils down to one special "int __bitwise" type. |
| |
| So the simpler way is to just do |
| |
| typedef int __bitwise pm_request_t; |
| |
| #define PM_SUSPEND ((__force pm_request_t) 1) |
| #define PM_RESUME ((__force pm_request_t) 2) |
| |
| and you now have all the infrastructure needed for strict typechecking. |
| |
| One small note: the constant integer "0" is special. You can use a |
| constant zero as a bitwise integer type without sparse ever complaining. |
| This is because "bitwise" (as the name implies) was designed for making |
| sure that bitwise types don't get mixed up (little-endian vs big-endian |
| vs cpu-endian vs whatever), and there the constant "0" really _is_ |
| special. |
| |
| Modify top-level Makefile to say |
| |
| CHECK = sparse -Wbitwise |
| |
| or you don't get any checking at all. |
| |
| |
| Where to get sparse |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| With BK, you can just get it from |
| |
| bk://sparse.bkbits.net/sparse |
| |
| and DaveJ has tar-balls at |
| |
| http://www.codemonkey.org.uk/projects/git-snapshots/sparse/ |
| |
| |
| Once you have it, just do |
| |
| make |
| make install |
| |
| as your regular user, and it will install sparse in your ~/bin directory. |
| After that, doing a kernel make with "make C=1" will run sparse on all the |
| C files that get recompiled, or with "make C=2" will run sparse on the |
| files whether they need to be recompiled or not (ie the latter is fast way |
| to check the whole tree if you have already built it). |