svn commit: r331226 - in head/sys: amd64/linux amd64/linux32 i386/linux
Bruce Evans
brde at optusnet.com.au
Tue Mar 20 08:50:30 UTC 2018
On Mon, 19 Mar 2018, Ed Maste wrote:
> Log:
> Rename linuxulator functions with linux_ prefix
>
> It's preferable to have a consistent prefix. This also reduces
> differences between the three linux*_sysvec.c files.
It is preferable to have a well-chosen (short...) prefix. The linux
emulator mostly uses l_ for internal names. That is a bit too short
for external names.
> Modified: head/sys/amd64/linux/linux_sysvec.c
> ==============================================================================
> --- head/sys/amd64/linux/linux_sysvec.c Mon Mar 19 21:13:25 2018 (r331225)
> +++ head/sys/amd64/linux/linux_sysvec.c Mon Mar 19 21:26:32 2018 (r331226)
> @@ -119,14 +119,14 @@ extern struct sysent linux_sysent[LINUX_SYS_MAXSYSCALL
> SET_DECLARE(linux_ioctl_handler_set, struct linux_ioctl_handler);
>
> static register_t * linux_copyout_strings(struct image_params *imgp);
> -static int elf_linux_fixup(register_t **stack_base,
> +static int linux_elf_fixup(register_t **stack_base,
> struct image_params *iparams);
'elf_' is an example of a well-chosen prefix.
I don't like the style of putting the verb last in names, but it goes well
with putting prefixes first. Here the verb placement style is random --
the verb is last in ...handler_set and ...elf_fixup, but not last in
...copyout_strings.
> @@ -180,7 +180,7 @@ LINUX_VDSO_SYM_CHAR(linux_platform);
> * MPSAFE
> */
> static int
> -translate_traps(int signal, int trap_code)
> +linux_translate_traps(int signal, int trap_code)
Names without any prefix are likely to have had the verb first, and now
in the middle.
> @@ -245,7 +245,7 @@ linux_set_syscall_retval(struct thread *td, int error)
> }
>
> static int
> -elf_linux_fixup(register_t **stack_base, struct image_params *imgp)
> +linux_fixup_elf(register_t **stack_base, struct image_params *imgp)
> {
> Elf_Auxargs *args;
> Elf_Addr *base;
The elf_ prefix was first, but is now last (after the verb, unlike
elsewhere for linux_elf_*.
> Modified: head/sys/amd64/linux32/linux32_sysvec.c
> ...
> static void linux32_fixlimit(struct rlimit *rl, int which);
The random verb order is especially confsing for 'fix' and 'fixup'.
'fixup' is a noun, but is sometimes abused as a verb and adverb instead
of the correct verb and adverb 'fix up'. When it is placed at the
end, e.g., for limit_fixup(), it is unclear if it is a noun or a verb.
The noun form would mean a function returning a fixup and the verb
form would mean a function fixing up something. Using 'fix' instead
of fix as a verb at the end is even worse since 'fix' really is both
a noun and a verb. The normal order in fixlimit makes it clear that
it is used as a verb.
Bruce
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