Hi Ævar, On Tue, 13 Jul 2021, Ævar Arnfjörð Bjarmason wrote: > > On Tue, Jul 13 2021, Jeff Hostetler wrote: > > > On 7/1/21 7:02 PM, Ævar Arnfjörð Bjarmason wrote: > >> On Thu, Jul 01 2021, Jeff Hostetler via GitGitGadget wrote: > >> > >>> From: Jeff Hostetler > >>> > >>> Teach the win32 backend to register a watch on the working tree > >>> root directory (recursively). Also watch the if it is > >>> not inside the working tree. And to collect path change notifications > >>> into batches and publish. > >>> > >>> Signed-off-by: Jeff Hostetler > >>> --- > >>> compat/fsmonitor/fsmonitor-fs-listen-win32.c | 530 +++++++++++++++++++ > >> Spying on the early history of this (looking for the > >> Linux backend) I saw that at some point we had just > >> compat/fsmonitor/linux.c, and presumably some of > >> compat/fsmonitor/{windows,win32,macos,darwin}.c. > >> At some point those filenames became much much longer. > >> > > > > Once upon a time having "foo/bar/win32.c" and "abc/def/win32.c" > > would cause confusion in the debugger (I've long since forgotten > > which). Breaking at win32.c:30 was no longer unique. > > > > Also, if the Makefile sends all .o's to the root directory or a > > unified OBJS directory rather than to the subdir containing the .c, > > then we have another issue during linking... > > > > So, having been burned too many times, I prefer to make source > > filenames unique when possible. > > A much shorter name like compat/fsmonitor/fsmon-win32.c would achieve > that goal. > > >> I've noticed you tend to prefer really long file and function names, > >> e.g. your borrowed daemonize() became > >> spawn_background_fsmonitor_daemon(), I think aiming for shorter > >> filenames & function names helps, e.g. these long names widen diffstats, > >> and many people who hack on the code stick religiously to 80 character > >> width terminals. > >> > > > > I prefer self-documenting code. > > Sure, I'm not saying daemonize() is an ideal name, just suggesting that > you can both get uniqueness & self-documentation and not need to split > to multiple lines in some common cases to stay within the "We try to > keep to at most 80 characters per line" in CodingGuidelines in this > series. While you are entitled to have your taste, I have to point out that Jeff is just as entitled to their taste, and I don't think that you can claim that yours is better. So I wonder what the intended outcome of this review is? To make the patch better? Or to pit taste against taste? Ciao, Johannes