[edk2-devel] [PATCH v4 0/9] support CPU hot-unplug

Ankur Arora ankur.a.arora at oracle.com
Fri Jan 22 06:32:19 UTC 2021


On 2021-01-21 11:51 a.m., Laszlo Ersek wrote:
> On 01/21/21 20:11, Ankur Arora wrote:
>> On 2021-01-21 4:29 a.m., Laszlo Ersek wrote:
> 
>>> For catching such issues early on, please run "PatchCheck.py" before
>>> posting, e.g. as in:
>>>
>>> $ python3 BaseTools/Scripts/PatchCheck.py master..topic_branch
>>>
>>> (In the present case, PatchCheck reports lots of "not CRLF" errors.)
>>>
>>
>> PatchCheck.py is great. Thanks.
>>
>>>
>>> An even better idea is to push your topic branch (which you're about to
>>> post to the list) to your edk2 fork on github.com, and then submit a
>>> pull request against the "tianocore/edk2" project. The pull request will
>>> be auto-closed in the end (it will never be merged), but the goal is to
>>> trigger a CI run on the patch set, and to give you the error messages if
>>> any. PatchCheck runs as a part of CI, too.
>>>
>>> (github.com PRs are used for actual merging by edk2 maintainers, but for
>>> that, they set the "push" label on the subject PRs, and the "push" label
>>> is restricted to maintainers.)
>>>
>>> I apologize about the extra delay. Would you be OK posting v5?
>>
>> Sure.
> 
> Thanks for your understanding, I'm relieved.
> 
>> Just a side question which I should have asked you earlier: are
>> the coding standards listed somewhere?
> 
> Yes, see "C Coding Standards" at
> <https://github.com/tianocore/tianocore.github.io/wiki/EDK-II-Documentation#specifications>.
> 
> Although...
> 
>> I had looked for answers to similar questions but the "TianoCore C style
>> guide" doesn't mention either PatchCheck.py or rules around CRLF.
> 
> ... you may have found exactly that, already. Unfortunately, like all
> documentation in the world, this document is somewhat out of date.
> 
> There is also a tool, called ECC, that contains a builtin C language
> parser, that enforces various style requirements. It's built into the CI
> system and runs on github -- however, we have it disabled for OVMF, in
> commit ef3e73c6a0c0 ("OvmfPkg: Disable EccCheck CI until EccCheck issues
> are fixed", 2020-12-14). There are two reasons for that:
> 
> - Some stuff that ECC enforces is just overzealous -- in some cases, we
> relax the coding style under OvmfPkg specifically, but ECC cannot easily
> be configured to tolerate those relaxations (for example, you cannot
> configure it to ignore a particular error code *regardless* of where it
> occurs under OvmfPkg).
> 
> - In some cases, ECC rejects C language constructs that are both valid
> and conformant to the coding style (i.e., ECC has its own bugs).
> 
> 
> So we usually "teach" these quirks to contributors during review. It's
> quite a lot of investment, which is part of why we hope that
> contributors stick around.

A very understandable sentiment :).

> 
> An alternative is this: in your topic branch that you intend to post to
> edk2-devel, include an *extra* patch (not to be posted to the list) that
> *reverts* commit ef3e73c6a0c0. And submit a github.com PR with this
> variant of your topic branch. As a result, ECC will be unleashed on (the
> end-stage of) your patch series. If you fix all of the ECC issues, then
> reviewers should make next to zero *style* complaints -- on the other
> hand, you could be updating code that ECC complains about *incorrectly*
> (due to an ECC bug, or because the subject style rule is something we
> deem superfluous, or at least "possible to bend", under OvmfPkg).
> 
> So perhaps try to investigate this latter avenue, and see if you are
> willing to deal with what ECC throws at you. :)

Can't guarantee that I'll see it through but my curiosity on what ECC
will throw at me is piqued. Will try.

> 
>> Thanks for the comments and my apologies for making you review all of
>> these non-substantive changes.
> 
> It's a standard part of reviewing the first few contributions of a new
> community member; it's too bad we don't have better stuff in place. We
> do have docs but they are slightly outdated, and we do have ECC but with
> warts.
> 
> We also have recommendations (not official requirements!) on setting up
> git, as a part of
> <https://github.com/tianocore/tianocore.github.io/wiki/Laszlo's-unkempt-git-guide-for-edk2-contributors-and-maintainers>
> -- which is likely out of date somewhat --; the

I guess that's the nature of non-executable bits... out of date
soon as they are written. Thanks, this and the scripts below both
were pretty useful.

>    BaseTools/Scripts/SetupGit.py
> 
> utility automates more or less the same settings.
> 
> We also have
> 
>    BaseTools/Scripts/GetMaintainer.py
> 
> which lets you determine the Cc:'s you should put in each commit message...
> 
> And when you dump all this *process* on a new contributor, they run away
> screaming -- kind of justifiedly. :/

Heh, I think I see the appeal of this gradual introduction of process.

Personally speaking, it is after working on this feature and seeing
things  like SafeUintnMult(), that you see that FW generally and EDK2
specifically really does need to be written differently from, for
instance the kernel.

Thanks
Ankur
  
> 
> Thanks
> Laszlo
> 


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