1.. SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0-only 2 3========== 4Checkpatch 5========== 6 7Checkpatch (scripts/checkpatch.pl) is a perl script which checks for trivial 8style violations in patches and optionally corrects them. Checkpatch can 9also be run on file contexts and without the kernel tree. 10 11Checkpatch is not always right. Your judgement takes precedence over checkpatch 12messages. If your code looks better with the violations, then its probably 13best left alone. 14 15 16Options 17======= 18 19This section will describe the options checkpatch can be run with. 20 21Usage:: 22 23 ./scripts/checkpatch.pl [OPTION]... [FILE]... 24 25Available options: 26 27 - -q, --quiet 28 29 Enable quiet mode. 30 31 - -v, --verbose 32 Enable verbose mode. Additional verbose test descriptions are output 33 so as to provide information on why that particular message is shown. 34 35 - --no-tree 36 37 Run checkpatch without the kernel tree. 38 39 - --no-signoff 40 41 Disable the 'Signed-off-by' line check. The sign-off is a simple line at 42 the end of the explanation for the patch, which certifies that you wrote it 43 or otherwise have the right to pass it on as an open-source patch. 44 45 Example:: 46 47 Signed-off-by: Random J Developer <random@developer.example.org> 48 49 Setting this flag effectively stops a message for a missing signed-off-by 50 line in a patch context. 51 52 - --patch 53 54 Treat FILE as a patch. This is the default option and need not be 55 explicitly specified. 56 57 - --emacs 58 59 Set output to emacs compile window format. This allows emacs users to jump 60 from the error in the compile window directly to the offending line in the 61 patch. 62 63 - --terse 64 65 Output only one line per report. 66 67 - --showfile 68 69 Show the diffed file position instead of the input file position. 70 71 - -g, --git 72 73 Treat FILE as a single commit or a git revision range. 74 75 Single commit with: 76 77 - <rev> 78 - <rev>^ 79 - <rev>~n 80 81 Multiple commits with: 82 83 - <rev1>..<rev2> 84 - <rev1>...<rev2> 85 - <rev>-<count> 86 87 - -f, --file 88 89 Treat FILE as a regular source file. This option must be used when running 90 checkpatch on source files in the kernel. 91 92 - --subjective, --strict 93 94 Enable stricter tests in checkpatch. By default the tests emitted as CHECK 95 do not activate by default. Use this flag to activate the CHECK tests. 96 97 - --list-types 98 99 Every message emitted by checkpatch has an associated TYPE. Add this flag 100 to display all the types in checkpatch. 101 102 Note that when this flag is active, checkpatch does not read the input FILE, 103 and no message is emitted. Only a list of types in checkpatch is output. 104 105 - --types TYPE(,TYPE2...) 106 107 Only display messages with the given types. 108 109 Example:: 110 111 ./scripts/checkpatch.pl mypatch.patch --types EMAIL_SUBJECT,BRACES 112 113 - --ignore TYPE(,TYPE2...) 114 115 Checkpatch will not emit messages for the specified types. 116 117 Example:: 118 119 ./scripts/checkpatch.pl mypatch.patch --ignore EMAIL_SUBJECT,BRACES 120 121 - --show-types 122 123 By default checkpatch doesn't display the type associated with the messages. 124 Set this flag to show the message type in the output. 125 126 - --max-line-length=n 127 128 Set the max line length (default 100). If a line exceeds the specified 129 length, a LONG_LINE message is emitted. 130 131 132 The message level is different for patch and file contexts. For patches, 133 a WARNING is emitted. While a milder CHECK is emitted for files. So for 134 file contexts, the --strict flag must also be enabled. 135 136 - --min-conf-desc-length=n 137 138 Set the Kconfig entry minimum description length, if shorter, warn. 139 140 - --tab-size=n 141 142 Set the number of spaces for tab (default 8). 143 144 - --root=PATH 145 146 PATH to the kernel tree root. 147 148 This option must be specified when invoking checkpatch from outside 149 the kernel root. 150 151 - --no-summary 152 153 Suppress the per file summary. 154 155 - --mailback 156 157 Only produce a report in case of Warnings or Errors. Milder Checks are 158 excluded from this. 159 160 - --summary-file 161 162 Include the filename in summary. 163 164 - --debug KEY=[0|1] 165 166 Turn on/off debugging of KEY, where KEY is one of 'values', 'possible', 167 'type', and 'attr' (default is all off). 168 169 - --fix 170 171 This is an EXPERIMENTAL feature. If correctable errors exist, a file 172 <inputfile>.EXPERIMENTAL-checkpatch-fixes is created which has the 173 automatically fixable errors corrected. 174 175 - --fix-inplace 176 177 EXPERIMENTAL - Similar to --fix but input file is overwritten with fixes. 178 179 DO NOT USE this flag unless you are absolutely sure and you have a backup 180 in place. 181 182 - --ignore-perl-version 183 184 Override checking of perl version. Runtime errors may be encountered after 185 enabling this flag if the perl version does not meet the minimum specified. 186 187 - --codespell 188 189 Use the codespell dictionary for checking spelling errors. 190 191 - --codespellfile 192 193 Use the specified codespell file. 194 Default is '/usr/share/codespell/dictionary.txt'. 195 196 - --typedefsfile 197 198 Read additional types from this file. 199 200 - --color[=WHEN] 201 202 Use colors 'always', 'never', or only when output is a terminal ('auto'). 203 Default is 'auto'. 204 205 - --kconfig-prefix=WORD 206 207 Use WORD as a prefix for Kconfig symbols (default is `CONFIG_`). 208 209 - -h, --help, --version 210 211 Display the help text. 212 213Message Levels 214============== 215 216Messages in checkpatch are divided into three levels. The levels of messages 217in checkpatch denote the severity of the error. They are: 218 219 - ERROR 220 221 This is the most strict level. Messages of type ERROR must be taken 222 seriously as they denote things that are very likely to be wrong. 223 224 - WARNING 225 226 This is the next stricter level. Messages of type WARNING requires a 227 more careful review. But it is milder than an ERROR. 228 229 - CHECK 230 231 This is the mildest level. These are things which may require some thought. 232 233Type Descriptions 234================= 235 236This section contains a description of all the message types in checkpatch. 237 238.. Types in this section are also parsed by checkpatch. 239.. The types are grouped into subsections based on use. 240 241 242Allocation style 243---------------- 244 245 **ALLOC_ARRAY_ARGS** 246 The first argument for kcalloc or kmalloc_array should be the 247 number of elements. sizeof() as the first argument is generally 248 wrong. 249 250 See: https://www.kernel.org/doc/html/latest/core-api/memory-allocation.html 251 252 **ALLOC_SIZEOF_STRUCT** 253 The allocation style is bad. In general for family of 254 allocation functions using sizeof() to get memory size, 255 constructs like:: 256 257 p = alloc(sizeof(struct foo), ...) 258 259 should be:: 260 261 p = alloc(sizeof(*p), ...) 262 263 See: https://www.kernel.org/doc/html/latest/process/coding-style.html#allocating-memory 264 265 **ALLOC_WITH_MULTIPLY** 266 Prefer kmalloc_array/kcalloc over kmalloc/kzalloc with a 267 sizeof multiply. 268 269 See: https://www.kernel.org/doc/html/latest/core-api/memory-allocation.html 270 271 272API usage 273--------- 274 275 **ARCH_DEFINES** 276 Architecture specific defines should be avoided wherever 277 possible. 278 279 **ARCH_INCLUDE_LINUX** 280 Whenever asm/file.h is included and linux/file.h exists, a 281 conversion can be made when linux/file.h includes asm/file.h. 282 However this is not always the case (See signal.h). 283 This message type is emitted only for includes from arch/. 284 285 **AVOID_BUG** 286 BUG() or BUG_ON() should be avoided totally. 287 Use WARN() and WARN_ON() instead, and handle the "impossible" 288 error condition as gracefully as possible. 289 290 See: https://www.kernel.org/doc/html/latest/process/deprecated.html#bug-and-bug-on 291 292 **CONSIDER_KSTRTO** 293 The simple_strtol(), simple_strtoll(), simple_strtoul(), and 294 simple_strtoull() functions explicitly ignore overflows, which 295 may lead to unexpected results in callers. The respective kstrtol(), 296 kstrtoll(), kstrtoul(), and kstrtoull() functions tend to be the 297 correct replacements. 298 299 See: https://www.kernel.org/doc/html/latest/process/deprecated.html#simple-strtol-simple-strtoll-simple-strtoul-simple-strtoull 300 301 **CONSTANT_CONVERSION** 302 Use of __constant_<foo> form is discouraged for the following functions:: 303 304 __constant_cpu_to_be[x] 305 __constant_cpu_to_le[x] 306 __constant_be[x]_to_cpu 307 __constant_le[x]_to_cpu 308 __constant_htons 309 __constant_ntohs 310 311 Using any of these outside of include/uapi/ is not preferred as using the 312 function without __constant_ is identical when the argument is a 313 constant. 314 315 In big endian systems, the macros like __constant_cpu_to_be32(x) and 316 cpu_to_be32(x) expand to the same expression:: 317 318 #define __constant_cpu_to_be32(x) ((__force __be32)(__u32)(x)) 319 #define __cpu_to_be32(x) ((__force __be32)(__u32)(x)) 320 321 In little endian systems, the macros __constant_cpu_to_be32(x) and 322 cpu_to_be32(x) expand to __constant_swab32 and __swab32. __swab32 323 has a __builtin_constant_p check:: 324 325 #define __swab32(x) \ 326 (__builtin_constant_p((__u32)(x)) ? \ 327 ___constant_swab32(x) : \ 328 __fswab32(x)) 329 330 So ultimately they have a special case for constants. 331 Similar is the case with all of the macros in the list. Thus 332 using the __constant_... forms are unnecessarily verbose and 333 not preferred outside of include/uapi. 334 335 See: https://lore.kernel.org/lkml/1400106425.12666.6.camel@joe-AO725/ 336 337 **DEPRECATED_API** 338 Usage of a deprecated RCU API is detected. It is recommended to replace 339 old flavourful RCU APIs by their new vanilla-RCU counterparts. 340 341 The full list of available RCU APIs can be viewed from the kernel docs. 342 343 See: https://www.kernel.org/doc/html/latest/RCU/whatisRCU.html#full-list-of-rcu-apis 344 345 **DEPRECATED_VARIABLE** 346 EXTRA_{A,C,CPP,LD}FLAGS are deprecated and should be replaced by the new 347 flags added via commit f77bf01425b1 ("kbuild: introduce ccflags-y, 348 asflags-y and ldflags-y"). 349 350 The following conversion scheme maybe used:: 351 352 EXTRA_AFLAGS -> asflags-y 353 EXTRA_CFLAGS -> ccflags-y 354 EXTRA_CPPFLAGS -> cppflags-y 355 EXTRA_LDFLAGS -> ldflags-y 356 357 See: 358 359 1. https://lore.kernel.org/lkml/20070930191054.GA15876@uranus.ravnborg.org/ 360 2. https://lore.kernel.org/lkml/1313384834-24433-12-git-send-email-lacombar@gmail.com/ 361 3. https://www.kernel.org/doc/html/latest/kbuild/makefiles.html#compilation-flags 362 363 **DEVICE_ATTR_FUNCTIONS** 364 The function names used in DEVICE_ATTR is unusual. 365 Typically, the store and show functions are used with <attr>_store and 366 <attr>_show, where <attr> is a named attribute variable of the device. 367 368 Consider the following examples:: 369 370 static DEVICE_ATTR(type, 0444, type_show, NULL); 371 static DEVICE_ATTR(power, 0644, power_show, power_store); 372 373 The function names should preferably follow the above pattern. 374 375 See: https://www.kernel.org/doc/html/latest/driver-api/driver-model/device.html#attributes 376 377 **DEVICE_ATTR_RO** 378 The DEVICE_ATTR_RO(name) helper macro can be used instead of 379 DEVICE_ATTR(name, 0444, name_show, NULL); 380 381 Note that the macro automatically appends _show to the named 382 attribute variable of the device for the show method. 383 384 See: https://www.kernel.org/doc/html/latest/driver-api/driver-model/device.html#attributes 385 386 **DEVICE_ATTR_RW** 387 The DEVICE_ATTR_RW(name) helper macro can be used instead of 388 DEVICE_ATTR(name, 0644, name_show, name_store); 389 390 Note that the macro automatically appends _show and _store to the 391 named attribute variable of the device for the show and store methods. 392 393 See: https://www.kernel.org/doc/html/latest/driver-api/driver-model/device.html#attributes 394 395 **DEVICE_ATTR_WO** 396 The DEVICE_AATR_WO(name) helper macro can be used instead of 397 DEVICE_ATTR(name, 0200, NULL, name_store); 398 399 Note that the macro automatically appends _store to the 400 named attribute variable of the device for the store method. 401 402 See: https://www.kernel.org/doc/html/latest/driver-api/driver-model/device.html#attributes 403 404 **DUPLICATED_SYSCTL_CONST** 405 Commit d91bff3011cf ("proc/sysctl: add shared variables for range 406 check") added some shared const variables to be used instead of a local 407 copy in each source file. 408 409 Consider replacing the sysctl range checking value with the shared 410 one in include/linux/sysctl.h. The following conversion scheme may 411 be used:: 412 413 &zero -> SYSCTL_ZERO 414 &one -> SYSCTL_ONE 415 &int_max -> SYSCTL_INT_MAX 416 417 See: 418 419 1. https://lore.kernel.org/lkml/20190430180111.10688-1-mcroce@redhat.com/ 420 2. https://lore.kernel.org/lkml/20190531131422.14970-1-mcroce@redhat.com/ 421 422 **ENOSYS** 423 ENOSYS means that a nonexistent system call was called. 424 Earlier, it was wrongly used for things like invalid operations on 425 otherwise valid syscalls. This should be avoided in new code. 426 427 See: https://lore.kernel.org/lkml/5eb299021dec23c1a48fa7d9f2c8b794e967766d.1408730669.git.luto@amacapital.net/ 428 429 **ENOTSUPP** 430 ENOTSUPP is not a standard error code and should be avoided in new patches. 431 EOPNOTSUPP should be used instead. 432 433 See: https://lore.kernel.org/netdev/20200510182252.GA411829@lunn.ch/ 434 435 **EXPORT_SYMBOL** 436 EXPORT_SYMBOL should immediately follow the symbol to be exported. 437 438 **IN_ATOMIC** 439 in_atomic() is not for driver use so any such use is reported as an ERROR. 440 Also in_atomic() is often used to determine if sleeping is permitted, 441 but it is not reliable in this use model. Therefore its use is 442 strongly discouraged. 443 444 However, in_atomic() is ok for core kernel use. 445 446 See: https://lore.kernel.org/lkml/20080320201723.b87b3732.akpm@linux-foundation.org/ 447 448 **LOCKDEP** 449 The lockdep_no_validate class was added as a temporary measure to 450 prevent warnings on conversion of device->sem to device->mutex. 451 It should not be used for any other purpose. 452 453 See: https://lore.kernel.org/lkml/1268959062.9440.467.camel@laptop/ 454 455 **MALFORMED_INCLUDE** 456 The #include statement has a malformed path. This has happened 457 because the author has included a double slash "//" in the pathname 458 accidentally. 459 460 **USE_LOCKDEP** 461 lockdep_assert_held() annotations should be preferred over 462 assertions based on spin_is_locked() 463 464 See: https://www.kernel.org/doc/html/latest/locking/lockdep-design.html#annotations 465 466 **UAPI_INCLUDE** 467 No #include statements in include/uapi should use a uapi/ path. 468 469 **USLEEP_RANGE** 470 usleep_range() should be preferred over udelay(). The proper way of 471 using usleep_range() is mentioned in the kernel docs. 472 473 474Comments 475-------- 476 477 **BLOCK_COMMENT_STYLE** 478 The comment style is incorrect. The preferred style for multi- 479 line comments is:: 480 481 /* 482 * This is the preferred style 483 * for multi line comments. 484 */ 485 486 The networking comment style is a bit different, with the first line 487 not empty like the former:: 488 489 /* This is the preferred comment style 490 * for files in net/ and drivers/net/ 491 */ 492 493 See: https://www.kernel.org/doc/html/latest/process/coding-style.html#commenting 494 495 **C99_COMMENTS** 496 C99 style single line comments (//) should not be used. 497 Prefer the block comment style instead. 498 499 See: https://www.kernel.org/doc/html/latest/process/coding-style.html#commenting 500 501 **DATA_RACE** 502 Applications of data_race() should have a comment so as to document the 503 reasoning behind why it was deemed safe. 504 505 See: https://lore.kernel.org/lkml/20200401101714.44781-1-elver@google.com/ 506 507 **FSF_MAILING_ADDRESS** 508 Kernel maintainers reject new instances of the GPL boilerplate paragraph 509 directing people to write to the FSF for a copy of the GPL, since the 510 FSF has moved in the past and may do so again. 511 So do not write paragraphs about writing to the Free Software Foundation's 512 mailing address. 513 514 See: https://lore.kernel.org/lkml/20131006222342.GT19510@leaf/ 515 516 517Commit message 518-------------- 519 520 **BAD_SIGN_OFF** 521 The signed-off-by line does not fall in line with the standards 522 specified by the community. 523 524 See: https://www.kernel.org/doc/html/latest/process/submitting-patches.html#developer-s-certificate-of-origin-1-1 525 526 **BAD_STABLE_ADDRESS_STYLE** 527 The email format for stable is incorrect. 528 Some valid options for stable address are:: 529 530 1. stable@vger.kernel.org 531 2. stable@kernel.org 532 533 For adding version info, the following comment style should be used:: 534 535 stable@vger.kernel.org # version info 536 537 **COMMIT_COMMENT_SYMBOL** 538 Commit log lines starting with a '#' are ignored by git as 539 comments. To solve this problem addition of a single space 540 infront of the log line is enough. 541 542 **COMMIT_MESSAGE** 543 The patch is missing a commit description. A brief 544 description of the changes made by the patch should be added. 545 546 See: https://www.kernel.org/doc/html/latest/process/submitting-patches.html#describe-your-changes 547 548 **EMAIL_SUBJECT** 549 Naming the tool that found the issue is not very useful in the 550 subject line. A good subject line summarizes the change that 551 the patch brings. 552 553 See: https://www.kernel.org/doc/html/latest/process/submitting-patches.html#describe-your-changes 554 555 **FROM_SIGN_OFF_MISMATCH** 556 The author's email does not match with that in the Signed-off-by: 557 line(s). This can be sometimes caused due to an improperly configured 558 email client. 559 560 This message is emitted due to any of the following reasons:: 561 562 - The email names do not match. 563 - The email addresses do not match. 564 - The email subaddresses do not match. 565 - The email comments do not match. 566 567 **MISSING_SIGN_OFF** 568 The patch is missing a Signed-off-by line. A signed-off-by 569 line should be added according to Developer's certificate of 570 Origin. 571 572 See: https://www.kernel.org/doc/html/latest/process/submitting-patches.html#sign-your-work-the-developer-s-certificate-of-origin 573 574 **NO_AUTHOR_SIGN_OFF** 575 The author of the patch has not signed off the patch. It is 576 required that a simple sign off line should be present at the 577 end of explanation of the patch to denote that the author has 578 written it or otherwise has the rights to pass it on as an open 579 source patch. 580 581 See: https://www.kernel.org/doc/html/latest/process/submitting-patches.html#sign-your-work-the-developer-s-certificate-of-origin 582 583 **DIFF_IN_COMMIT_MSG** 584 Avoid having diff content in commit message. 585 This causes problems when one tries to apply a file containing both 586 the changelog and the diff because patch(1) tries to apply the diff 587 which it found in the changelog. 588 589 See: https://lore.kernel.org/lkml/20150611134006.9df79a893e3636019ad2759e@linux-foundation.org/ 590 591 **GERRIT_CHANGE_ID** 592 To be picked up by gerrit, the footer of the commit message might 593 have a Change-Id like:: 594 595 Change-Id: Ic8aaa0728a43936cd4c6e1ed590e01ba8f0fbf5b 596 Signed-off-by: A. U. Thor <author@example.com> 597 598 The Change-Id line must be removed before submitting. 599 600 **GIT_COMMIT_ID** 601 The proper way to reference a commit id is: 602 commit <12+ chars of sha1> ("<title line>") 603 604 An example may be:: 605 606 Commit e21d2170f36602ae2708 ("video: remove unnecessary 607 platform_set_drvdata()") removed the unnecessary 608 platform_set_drvdata(), but left the variable "dev" unused, 609 delete it. 610 611 See: https://www.kernel.org/doc/html/latest/process/submitting-patches.html#describe-your-changes 612 613 **BAD_FIXES_TAG** 614 The Fixes: tag is malformed or does not follow the community conventions. 615 This can occur if the tag have been split into multiple lines (e.g., when 616 pasted in an email program with word wrapping enabled). 617 618 See: https://www.kernel.org/doc/html/latest/process/submitting-patches.html#describe-your-changes 619 620 621Comparison style 622---------------- 623 624 **ASSIGN_IN_IF** 625 Do not use assignments in if condition. 626 Example:: 627 628 if ((foo = bar(...)) < BAZ) { 629 630 should be written as:: 631 632 foo = bar(...); 633 if (foo < BAZ) { 634 635 **BOOL_COMPARISON** 636 Comparisons of A to true and false are better written 637 as A and !A. 638 639 See: https://lore.kernel.org/lkml/1365563834.27174.12.camel@joe-AO722/ 640 641 **COMPARISON_TO_NULL** 642 Comparisons to NULL in the form (foo == NULL) or (foo != NULL) 643 are better written as (!foo) and (foo). 644 645 **CONSTANT_COMPARISON** 646 Comparisons with a constant or upper case identifier on the left 647 side of the test should be avoided. 648 649 650Indentation and Line Breaks 651--------------------------- 652 653 **CODE_INDENT** 654 Code indent should use tabs instead of spaces. 655 Outside of comments, documentation and Kconfig, 656 spaces are never used for indentation. 657 658 See: https://www.kernel.org/doc/html/latest/process/coding-style.html#indentation 659 660 **DEEP_INDENTATION** 661 Indentation with 6 or more tabs usually indicate overly indented 662 code. 663 664 It is suggested to refactor excessive indentation of 665 if/else/for/do/while/switch statements. 666 667 See: https://lore.kernel.org/lkml/1328311239.21255.24.camel@joe2Laptop/ 668 669 **SWITCH_CASE_INDENT_LEVEL** 670 switch should be at the same indent as case. 671 Example:: 672 673 switch (suffix) { 674 case 'G': 675 case 'g': 676 mem <<= 30; 677 break; 678 case 'M': 679 case 'm': 680 mem <<= 20; 681 break; 682 case 'K': 683 case 'k': 684 mem <<= 10; 685 fallthrough; 686 default: 687 break; 688 } 689 690 See: https://www.kernel.org/doc/html/latest/process/coding-style.html#indentation 691 692 **LONG_LINE** 693 The line has exceeded the specified maximum length. 694 To use a different maximum line length, the --max-line-length=n option 695 may be added while invoking checkpatch. 696 697 Earlier, the default line length was 80 columns. Commit bdc48fa11e46 698 ("checkpatch/coding-style: deprecate 80-column warning") increased the 699 limit to 100 columns. This is not a hard limit either and it's 700 preferable to stay within 80 columns whenever possible. 701 702 See: https://www.kernel.org/doc/html/latest/process/coding-style.html#breaking-long-lines-and-strings 703 704 **LONG_LINE_STRING** 705 A string starts before but extends beyond the maximum line length. 706 To use a different maximum line length, the --max-line-length=n option 707 may be added while invoking checkpatch. 708 709 See: https://www.kernel.org/doc/html/latest/process/coding-style.html#breaking-long-lines-and-strings 710 711 **LONG_LINE_COMMENT** 712 A comment starts before but extends beyond the maximum line length. 713 To use a different maximum line length, the --max-line-length=n option 714 may be added while invoking checkpatch. 715 716 See: https://www.kernel.org/doc/html/latest/process/coding-style.html#breaking-long-lines-and-strings 717 718 **SPLIT_STRING** 719 Quoted strings that appear as messages in userspace and can be 720 grepped, should not be split across multiple lines. 721 722 See: https://lore.kernel.org/lkml/20120203052727.GA15035@leaf/ 723 724 **MULTILINE_DEREFERENCE** 725 A single dereferencing identifier spanned on multiple lines like:: 726 727 struct_identifier->member[index]. 728 member = <foo>; 729 730 is generally hard to follow. It can easily lead to typos and so makes 731 the code vulnerable to bugs. 732 733 If fixing the multiple line dereferencing leads to an 80 column 734 violation, then either rewrite the code in a more simple way or if the 735 starting part of the dereferencing identifier is the same and used at 736 multiple places then store it in a temporary variable, and use that 737 temporary variable only at all the places. For example, if there are 738 two dereferencing identifiers:: 739 740 member1->member2->member3.foo1; 741 member1->member2->member3.foo2; 742 743 then store the member1->member2->member3 part in a temporary variable. 744 It not only helps to avoid the 80 column violation but also reduces 745 the program size by removing the unnecessary dereferences. 746 747 But if none of the above methods work then ignore the 80 column 748 violation because it is much easier to read a dereferencing identifier 749 on a single line. 750 751 **TRAILING_STATEMENTS** 752 Trailing statements (for example after any conditional) should be 753 on the next line. 754 Statements, such as:: 755 756 if (x == y) break; 757 758 should be:: 759 760 if (x == y) 761 break; 762 763 764Macros, Attributes and Symbols 765------------------------------ 766 767 **ARRAY_SIZE** 768 The ARRAY_SIZE(foo) macro should be preferred over 769 sizeof(foo)/sizeof(foo[0]) for finding number of elements in an 770 array. 771 772 The macro is defined in include/linux/kernel.h:: 773 774 #define ARRAY_SIZE(x) (sizeof(x) / sizeof((x)[0])) 775 776 **AVOID_EXTERNS** 777 Function prototypes don't need to be declared extern in .h 778 files. It's assumed by the compiler and is unnecessary. 779 780 **AVOID_L_PREFIX** 781 Local symbol names that are prefixed with `.L` should be avoided, 782 as this has special meaning for the assembler; a symbol entry will 783 not be emitted into the symbol table. This can prevent `objtool` 784 from generating correct unwind info. 785 786 Symbols with STB_LOCAL binding may still be used, and `.L` prefixed 787 local symbol names are still generally usable within a function, 788 but `.L` prefixed local symbol names should not be used to denote 789 the beginning or end of code regions via 790 `SYM_CODE_START_LOCAL`/`SYM_CODE_END` 791 792 **BIT_MACRO** 793 Defines like: 1 << <digit> could be BIT(digit). 794 The BIT() macro is defined via include/linux/bits.h:: 795 796 #define BIT(nr) (1UL << (nr)) 797 798 **CONST_READ_MOSTLY** 799 When a variable is tagged with the __read_mostly annotation, it is a 800 signal to the compiler that accesses to the variable will be mostly 801 reads and rarely(but NOT never) a write. 802 803 const __read_mostly does not make any sense as const data is already 804 read-only. The __read_mostly annotation thus should be removed. 805 806 **DATE_TIME** 807 It is generally desirable that building the same source code with 808 the same set of tools is reproducible, i.e. the output is always 809 exactly the same. 810 811 The kernel does *not* use the ``__DATE__`` and ``__TIME__`` macros, 812 and enables warnings if they are used as they can lead to 813 non-deterministic builds. 814 815 See: https://www.kernel.org/doc/html/latest/kbuild/reproducible-builds.html#timestamps 816 817 **DEFINE_ARCH_HAS** 818 The ARCH_HAS_xyz and ARCH_HAVE_xyz patterns are wrong. 819 820 For big conceptual features use Kconfig symbols instead. And for 821 smaller things where we have compatibility fallback functions but 822 want architectures able to override them with optimized ones, we 823 should either use weak functions (appropriate for some cases), or 824 the symbol that protects them should be the same symbol we use. 825 826 See: https://lore.kernel.org/lkml/CA+55aFycQ9XJvEOsiM3txHL5bjUc8CeKWJNR_H+MiicaddB42Q@mail.gmail.com/ 827 828 **DO_WHILE_MACRO_WITH_TRAILING_SEMICOLON** 829 do {} while(0) macros should not have a trailing semicolon. 830 831 **INIT_ATTRIBUTE** 832 Const init definitions should use __initconst instead of 833 __initdata. 834 835 Similarly init definitions without const require a separate 836 use of const. 837 838 **INLINE_LOCATION** 839 The inline keyword should sit between storage class and type. 840 841 For example, the following segment:: 842 843 inline static int example_function(void) 844 { 845 ... 846 } 847 848 should be:: 849 850 static inline int example_function(void) 851 { 852 ... 853 } 854 855 **MISPLACED_INIT** 856 It is possible to use section markers on variables in a way 857 which gcc doesn't understand (or at least not the way the 858 developer intended):: 859 860 static struct __initdata samsung_pll_clock exynos4_plls[nr_plls] = { 861 862 does not put exynos4_plls in the .initdata section. The __initdata 863 marker can be virtually anywhere on the line, except right after 864 "struct". The preferred location is before the "=" sign if there is 865 one, or before the trailing ";" otherwise. 866 867 See: https://lore.kernel.org/lkml/1377655732.3619.19.camel@joe-AO722/ 868 869 **MULTISTATEMENT_MACRO_USE_DO_WHILE** 870 Macros with multiple statements should be enclosed in a 871 do - while block. Same should also be the case for macros 872 starting with `if` to avoid logic defects:: 873 874 #define macrofun(a, b, c) \ 875 do { \ 876 if (a == 5) \ 877 do_this(b, c); \ 878 } while (0) 879 880 See: https://www.kernel.org/doc/html/latest/process/coding-style.html#macros-enums-and-rtl 881 882 **PREFER_FALLTHROUGH** 883 Use the `fallthrough;` pseudo keyword instead of 884 `/* fallthrough */` like comments. 885 886 **TRAILING_SEMICOLON** 887 Macro definition should not end with a semicolon. The macro 888 invocation style should be consistent with function calls. 889 This can prevent any unexpected code paths:: 890 891 #define MAC do_something; 892 893 If this macro is used within a if else statement, like:: 894 895 if (some_condition) 896 MAC; 897 898 else 899 do_something; 900 901 Then there would be a compilation error, because when the macro is 902 expanded there are two trailing semicolons, so the else branch gets 903 orphaned. 904 905 See: https://lore.kernel.org/lkml/1399671106.2912.21.camel@joe-AO725/ 906 907 **MACRO_ARG_UNUSED** 908 If function-like macros do not utilize a parameter, it might result 909 in a build warning. We advocate for utilizing static inline functions 910 to replace such macros. 911 For example, for a macro such as the one below:: 912 913 #define test(a) do { } while (0) 914 915 there would be a warning like below:: 916 917 WARNING: Argument 'a' is not used in function-like macro. 918 919 See: https://www.kernel.org/doc/html/latest/process/coding-style.html#macros-enums-and-rtl 920 921 **SINGLE_STATEMENT_DO_WHILE_MACRO** 922 For the multi-statement macros, it is necessary to use the do-while 923 loop to avoid unpredictable code paths. The do-while loop helps to 924 group the multiple statements into a single one so that a 925 function-like macro can be used as a function only. 926 927 But for the single statement macros, it is unnecessary to use the 928 do-while loop. Although the code is syntactically correct but using 929 the do-while loop is redundant. So remove the do-while loop for single 930 statement macros. 931 932 **WEAK_DECLARATION** 933 Using weak declarations like __attribute__((weak)) or __weak 934 can have unintended link defects. Avoid using them. 935 936 937Functions and Variables 938----------------------- 939 940 **CAMELCASE** 941 Avoid CamelCase Identifiers. 942 943 See: https://www.kernel.org/doc/html/latest/process/coding-style.html#naming 944 945 **CONST_CONST** 946 Using `const <type> const *` is generally meant to be 947 written `const <type> * const`. 948 949 **CONST_STRUCT** 950 Using const is generally a good idea. Checkpatch reads 951 a list of frequently used structs that are always or 952 almost always constant. 953 954 The existing structs list can be viewed from 955 `scripts/const_structs.checkpatch`. 956 957 See: https://lore.kernel.org/lkml/alpine.DEB.2.10.1608281509480.3321@hadrien/ 958 959 **EMBEDDED_FUNCTION_NAME** 960 Embedded function names are less appropriate to use as 961 refactoring can cause function renaming. Prefer the use of 962 "%s", __func__ to embedded function names. 963 964 Note that this does not work with -f (--file) checkpatch option 965 as it depends on patch context providing the function name. 966 967 **FUNCTION_ARGUMENTS** 968 This warning is emitted due to any of the following reasons: 969 970 1. Arguments for the function declaration do not follow 971 the identifier name. Example:: 972 973 void foo 974 (int bar, int baz) 975 976 This should be corrected to:: 977 978 void foo(int bar, int baz) 979 980 2. Some arguments for the function definition do not 981 have an identifier name. Example:: 982 983 void foo(int) 984 985 All arguments should have identifier names. 986 987 **FUNCTION_WITHOUT_ARGS** 988 Function declarations without arguments like:: 989 990 int foo() 991 992 should be:: 993 994 int foo(void) 995 996 **GLOBAL_INITIALISERS** 997 Global variables should not be initialized explicitly to 998 0 (or NULL, false, etc.). Your compiler (or rather your 999 loader, which is responsible for zeroing out the relevant 1000 sections) automatically does it for you. 1001 1002 **INITIALISED_STATIC** 1003 Static variables should not be initialized explicitly to zero. 1004 Your compiler (or rather your loader) automatically does 1005 it for you. 1006 1007 **MULTIPLE_ASSIGNMENTS** 1008 Multiple assignments on a single line makes the code unnecessarily 1009 complicated. So on a single line assign value to a single variable 1010 only, this makes the code more readable and helps avoid typos. 1011 1012 **RETURN_PARENTHESES** 1013 return is not a function and as such doesn't need parentheses:: 1014 1015 return (bar); 1016 1017 can simply be:: 1018 1019 return bar; 1020 1021 1022Permissions 1023----------- 1024 1025 **DEVICE_ATTR_PERMS** 1026 The permissions used in DEVICE_ATTR are unusual. 1027 Typically only three permissions are used - 0644 (RW), 0444 (RO) 1028 and 0200 (WO). 1029 1030 See: https://www.kernel.org/doc/html/latest/filesystems/sysfs.html#attributes 1031 1032 **EXECUTE_PERMISSIONS** 1033 There is no reason for source files to be executable. The executable 1034 bit can be removed safely. 1035 1036 **EXPORTED_WORLD_WRITABLE** 1037 Exporting world writable sysfs/debugfs files is usually a bad thing. 1038 When done arbitrarily they can introduce serious security bugs. 1039 In the past, some of the debugfs vulnerabilities would seemingly allow 1040 any local user to write arbitrary values into device registers - a 1041 situation from which little good can be expected to emerge. 1042 1043 See: https://lore.kernel.org/linux-arm-kernel/cover.1296818921.git.segoon@openwall.com/ 1044 1045 **NON_OCTAL_PERMISSIONS** 1046 Permission bits should use 4 digit octal permissions (like 0700 or 0444). 1047 Avoid using any other base like decimal. 1048 1049 **SYMBOLIC_PERMS** 1050 Permission bits in the octal form are more readable and easier to 1051 understand than their symbolic counterparts because many command-line 1052 tools use this notation. Experienced kernel developers have been using 1053 these traditional Unix permission bits for decades and so they find it 1054 easier to understand the octal notation than the symbolic macros. 1055 For example, it is harder to read S_IWUSR|S_IRUGO than 0644, which 1056 obscures the developer's intent rather than clarifying it. 1057 1058 See: https://lore.kernel.org/lkml/CA+55aFw5v23T-zvDZp-MmD_EYxF8WbafwwB59934FV7g21uMGQ@mail.gmail.com/ 1059 1060 1061Spacing and Brackets 1062-------------------- 1063 1064 **ASSIGNMENT_CONTINUATIONS** 1065 Assignment operators should not be written at the start of a 1066 line but should follow the operand at the previous line. 1067 1068 **BRACES** 1069 The placement of braces is stylistically incorrect. 1070 The preferred way is to put the opening brace last on the line, 1071 and put the closing brace first:: 1072 1073 if (x is true) { 1074 we do y 1075 } 1076 1077 This applies for all non-functional blocks. 1078 However, there is one special case, namely functions: they have the 1079 opening brace at the beginning of the next line, thus:: 1080 1081 int function(int x) 1082 { 1083 body of function 1084 } 1085 1086 See: https://www.kernel.org/doc/html/latest/process/coding-style.html#placing-braces-and-spaces 1087 1088 **BRACKET_SPACE** 1089 Whitespace before opening bracket '[' is prohibited. 1090 There are some exceptions: 1091 1092 1. With a type on the left:: 1093 1094 int [] a; 1095 1096 2. At the beginning of a line for slice initialisers:: 1097 1098 [0...10] = 5, 1099 1100 3. Inside a curly brace:: 1101 1102 = { [0...10] = 5 } 1103 1104 **CONCATENATED_STRING** 1105 Concatenated elements should have a space in between. 1106 Example:: 1107 1108 printk(KERN_INFO"bar"); 1109 1110 should be:: 1111 1112 printk(KERN_INFO "bar"); 1113 1114 **ELSE_AFTER_BRACE** 1115 `else {` should follow the closing block `}` on the same line. 1116 1117 See: https://www.kernel.org/doc/html/latest/process/coding-style.html#placing-braces-and-spaces 1118 1119 **LINE_SPACING** 1120 Vertical space is wasted given the limited number of lines an 1121 editor window can display when multiple blank lines are used. 1122 1123 See: https://www.kernel.org/doc/html/latest/process/coding-style.html#spaces 1124 1125 **OPEN_BRACE** 1126 The opening brace should be following the function definitions on the 1127 next line. For any non-functional block it should be on the same line 1128 as the last construct. 1129 1130 See: https://www.kernel.org/doc/html/latest/process/coding-style.html#placing-braces-and-spaces 1131 1132 **POINTER_LOCATION** 1133 When using pointer data or a function that returns a pointer type, 1134 the preferred use of * is adjacent to the data name or function name 1135 and not adjacent to the type name. 1136 Examples:: 1137 1138 char *linux_banner; 1139 unsigned long long memparse(char *ptr, char **retptr); 1140 char *match_strdup(substring_t *s); 1141 1142 See: https://www.kernel.org/doc/html/latest/process/coding-style.html#spaces 1143 1144 **SPACING** 1145 Whitespace style used in the kernel sources is described in kernel docs. 1146 1147 See: https://www.kernel.org/doc/html/latest/process/coding-style.html#spaces 1148 1149 **TRAILING_WHITESPACE** 1150 Trailing whitespace should always be removed. 1151 Some editors highlight the trailing whitespace and cause visual 1152 distractions when editing files. 1153 1154 See: https://www.kernel.org/doc/html/latest/process/coding-style.html#spaces 1155 1156 **UNNECESSARY_PARENTHESES** 1157 Parentheses are not required in the following cases: 1158 1159 1. Function pointer uses:: 1160 1161 (foo->bar)(); 1162 1163 could be:: 1164 1165 foo->bar(); 1166 1167 2. Comparisons in if:: 1168 1169 if ((foo->bar) && (foo->baz)) 1170 if ((foo == bar)) 1171 1172 could be:: 1173 1174 if (foo->bar && foo->baz) 1175 if (foo == bar) 1176 1177 3. addressof/dereference single Lvalues:: 1178 1179 &(foo->bar) 1180 *(foo->bar) 1181 1182 could be:: 1183 1184 &foo->bar 1185 *foo->bar 1186 1187 **WHILE_AFTER_BRACE** 1188 while should follow the closing bracket on the same line:: 1189 1190 do { 1191 ... 1192 } while(something); 1193 1194 See: https://www.kernel.org/doc/html/latest/process/coding-style.html#placing-braces-and-spaces 1195 1196 1197Others 1198------ 1199 1200 **CONFIG_DESCRIPTION** 1201 Kconfig symbols should have a help text which fully describes 1202 it. 1203 1204 **CORRUPTED_PATCH** 1205 The patch seems to be corrupted or lines are wrapped. 1206 Please regenerate the patch file before sending it to the maintainer. 1207 1208 **CVS_KEYWORD** 1209 Since linux moved to git, the CVS markers are no longer used. 1210 So, CVS style keywords ($Id$, $Revision$, $Log$) should not be 1211 added. 1212 1213 **DEFAULT_NO_BREAK** 1214 switch default case is sometimes written as "default:;". This can 1215 cause new cases added below default to be defective. 1216 1217 A "break;" should be added after empty default statement to avoid 1218 unwanted fallthrough. 1219 1220 **DOS_LINE_ENDINGS** 1221 For DOS-formatted patches, there are extra ^M symbols at the end of 1222 the line. These should be removed. 1223 1224 **DT_SCHEMA_BINDING_PATCH** 1225 DT bindings moved to a json-schema based format instead of 1226 freeform text. 1227 1228 See: https://www.kernel.org/doc/html/latest/devicetree/bindings/writing-schema.html 1229 1230 **DT_SPLIT_BINDING_PATCH** 1231 Devicetree bindings should be their own patch. This is because 1232 bindings are logically independent from a driver implementation, 1233 they have a different maintainer (even though they often 1234 are applied via the same tree), and it makes for a cleaner history in the 1235 DT only tree created with git-filter-branch. 1236 1237 See: https://www.kernel.org/doc/html/latest/devicetree/bindings/submitting-patches.html#i-for-patch-submitters 1238 1239 **EMBEDDED_FILENAME** 1240 Embedding the complete filename path inside the file isn't particularly 1241 useful as often the path is moved around and becomes incorrect. 1242 1243 **FILE_PATH_CHANGES** 1244 Whenever files are added, moved, or deleted, the MAINTAINERS file 1245 patterns can be out of sync or outdated. 1246 1247 So MAINTAINERS might need updating in these cases. 1248 1249 **MEMSET** 1250 The memset use appears to be incorrect. This may be caused due to 1251 badly ordered parameters. Please recheck the usage. 1252 1253 **NOT_UNIFIED_DIFF** 1254 The patch file does not appear to be in unified-diff format. Please 1255 regenerate the patch file before sending it to the maintainer. 1256 1257 **PRINTF_0XDECIMAL** 1258 Prefixing 0x with decimal output is defective and should be corrected. 1259 1260 **SPDX_LICENSE_TAG** 1261 The source file is missing or has an improper SPDX identifier tag. 1262 The Linux kernel requires the precise SPDX identifier in all source files, 1263 and it is thoroughly documented in the kernel docs. 1264 1265 See: https://www.kernel.org/doc/html/latest/process/license-rules.html 1266 1267 **TYPO_SPELLING** 1268 Some words may have been misspelled. Consider reviewing them. 1269