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2022-05-03Fixed #define style.Alejandro Colomar1-44/+22
We had a mix of styles for declaring function-like macros: Style A: #define \ foo() \ do { \ ... \ } while (0) Style B: #define foo() \ do { \ ... \ } while (0) We had a similar number of occurences of each style: $ grep -rnI '^\w*(.*\\' | wc -l 244 $ grep -rn 'define.*(.*)' | wc -l 239 (Those regexes aren't perfect, but a very decent approximation.) Real examples: $ find src -type f | xargs sed -n '/^nxt_double_is_zero/,/^$/p' nxt_double_is_zero(f) \ (fabs(f) <= FLT_EPSILON) $ find src -type f | xargs sed -n '/define nxt_http_field_set/,/^$/p' #define nxt_http_field_set(_field, _name, _value) \ do { \ (_field)->name_length = nxt_length(_name); \ (_field)->value_length = nxt_length(_value); \ (_field)->name = (u_char *) _name; \ (_field)->value = (u_char *) _value; \ } while (0) I'd like to standardize on a single style for them, and IMO, having the identifier in the same line as #define is a better option for the following reasons: - Programmers are used to `#define foo() ...` (readability). - One less line of code. - The program for finding them is really simple (see below). function grep_ngx_func() { if (($# != 1)); then >&2 echo "Usage: ${FUNCNAME[0]} <func>"; return 1; fi; find src -type f \ | grep '\.[ch]$' \ | xargs grep -l "$1" \ | sort \ | xargs pcregrep -Mn "(?s)^\$[\w\s*]+?^$1\(.*?^}"; find src -type f \ | grep '\.[ch]$' \ | xargs grep -l "$1" \ | sort \ | xargs pcregrep -Mn "(?s)define $1\(.*?^$" \ | sed -E '1s/^[^:]+:[0-9]+:/&\n\n/'; } $ grep_ngx_func Usage: grep_ngx_func <func> $ grep_ngx_func nxt_http_field_set src/nxt_http.h:98: #define nxt_http_field_set(_field, _name, _value) \ do { \ (_field)->name_length = nxt_length(_name); \ (_field)->value_length = nxt_length(_value); \ (_field)->name = (u_char *) _name; \ (_field)->value = (u_char *) _value; \ } while (0) $ grep_ngx_func nxt_sprintf src/nxt_sprintf.c:56: u_char * nxt_cdecl nxt_sprintf(u_char *buf, u_char *end, const char *fmt, ...) { u_char *p; va_list args; va_start(args, fmt); p = nxt_vsprintf(buf, end, fmt, args); va_end(args); return p; } ................ Scripted change: ................ $ find src -type f \ | grep '\.[ch]$' \ | xargs sed -i '/define *\\$/{N;s/ *\\\n/ /;s/ //}'
2022-04-27Added NXT_MAYBE_UNUSED for __attribute__((__unused__)).Alejandro Colomar1-0/+11
When testing some configurations of compilers and OSes, I noticed that clang(1) 13 on Debian caused a function to be compiled but unused, and the compiler triggered a compile error. To avoid that error, use __attribute__((__unused__)). Let's call our wrapper NXT_MAYBE_UNUSED, since it describes itself more precisely than the GCC attribute name. It's also the name that C2x (likely C23) has given to the standard attribute, which is [[maybe_unused]], so it's also likely to be more readable because of that name being in ISO C.
2018-06-25Introduced nxt_length() macro.Valentin Bartenev1-0/+4
2018-06-21More effective implementation of nxt_popcount().Valentin Bartenev1-2/+2
This method requires as many iterations as there are set bits, while the previous one has to shift up to the position of the highest bit.
2018-06-20Using own popcount where the compiler builtin is not available.Sergey Kandaurov1-0/+21
2018-04-04Style: capitalized letters in hexadecimal literals.Valentin Bartenev1-2/+2
2017-07-18More accurate "packed" attribute declaration.Valentin Bartenev1-2/+11
2017-07-07Cosmetic changes to remove some annoying valgrind messages.Max Romanov1-0/+2
2017-06-26Interface for mapping JSON configuration objects to C structures.Valentin Bartenev1-0/+4
2017-06-26Build on Solaris 11 fixed.Max Romanov1-3/+0
2017-06-19Memory pools refactoring.Igor Sysoev1-0/+6
2017-05-31Skeleton of router configuration and request processing.Igor Sysoev1-0/+4
2017-04-11The nxt_expect() macro.Valentin Bartenev1-2/+10