On Mon, 14 Mar 2016, Joe Perches wrote: > On Mon, 2016-03-14 at 06:19 +0100, Julia Lawall wrote: > > On Sun, 13 Mar 2016, Joe Perches wrote: > > > Loggng messages that emit function names have many different forms. > > > Perhaps it'd be better for logging consistency and grep ease to > > > exclusively use "%s:" > > >  > > > As well, function tracing logging uses are generally unnecessary given > > > the kernel's function tracing (ftrace) capability. > > >  > > > Right now, grep shows these mixtures of forms: > > >  > > > 13704 "%s:" > > > 3839  "%s " > > > 2787  "%s()" > > >  > > > Some of these are macros definitions of various styles. > > >  > > > Unfortunately, given the complexity of these macro definition styles, > > > checkpatch isn't an ideal tool to find these macros. > > >  > > > Maybe a coccinelle script might be better suited to find and fix all > > > the various types of uses. > > >  > > > Add a --fix option for these logging messages with __func__. > > > > I'm not good enough at perl to really understand this.  Coudl you give an  > > example of what it does, and of what it does not do? > > For instance, this could do simple conversions like: > > $ diff --git a/arch/arm/common/mcpm_entry.c b/arch/arm/common/mcpm_entry.c > @@ -416 +416 @@ int __init mcpm_loopback(void (*cache_disable)(void)) > -               pr_err("%s returned %d\n", __func__, ret); > +               pr_err("%s: returned %d\n", __func__, ret); > > But it couldn't find/convert a string concatenation: > > #define pch_dbg(adap, fmt, arg...)  \ >         dev_dbg(adap->pch_adapter.dev.parent, "%s :" fmt, __func__, ##arg) OK, are there any thoughts about what to do when __func__ is not in the first position? julia