coccicheck: introduce 'pending' semantic patches
authorSZEDER Gábor <szeder.dev@gmail.com>
Sat, 10 Nov 2018 00:10:52 +0000 (16:10 -0800)
committerJunio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Wed, 14 Nov 2018 02:22:36 +0000 (11:22 +0900)
Teach `make coccicheck` to avoid patches named "*.pending.cocci" and
handle them separately in a new `make coccicheck-pending` instead.
This means that we can separate "critical" patches from "FYI" patches.
The former target can continue causing Travis to fail its static
analysis job, while the latter can let us keep an eye on ongoing
(pending) transitions without them causing too much fallout.

Document the intended use-cases around these two targets.
As the process around the pending patches is not yet fully explored,
leave that out.

Signed-off-by: SZEDER Gábor <szeder.dev@gmail.com>
Based-on-work-by: SZEDER Gábor <szeder.dev@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Stefan Beller <sbeller@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Makefile
contrib/coccinelle/README
index bbfbb4292d49e99704d75a093a97d432c537cd8d..6bc4654828dd2edf42b54ecfc906e73b45336f7a 100644 (file)
--- a/Makefile
+++ b/Makefile
@@ -2740,9 +2740,12 @@ endif
        then \
                echo '    ' SPATCH result: $@; \
        fi
-coccicheck: $(addsuffix .patch,$(wildcard contrib/coccinelle/*.cocci))
+coccicheck: $(addsuffix .patch,$(filter-out %.pending.cocci,$(wildcard contrib/coccinelle/*.cocci)))
 
-.PHONY: coccicheck
+# See contrib/coccinelle/README
+coccicheck-pending: $(addsuffix .patch,$(wildcard contrib/coccinelle/*.pending.cocci))
+
+.PHONY: coccicheck coccicheck-pending
 
 ### Installation rules
 
index 9c2f8879c2efd40a1a7f10980b0603aaeaae6228..f0e80bd7f037731530e7099dc2b27985dd880be3 100644 (file)
@@ -1,2 +1,43 @@
 This directory provides examples of Coccinelle (http://coccinelle.lip6.fr/)
 semantic patches that might be useful to developers.
+
+There are two types of semantic patches:
+
+ * Using the semantic transformation to check for bad patterns in the code;
+   The target 'make coccicheck' is designed to check for these patterns and
+   it is expected that any resulting patch indicates a regression.
+   The patches resulting from 'make coccicheck' are small and infrequent,
+   so once they are found, they can be sent to the mailing list as per usual.
+
+   Example for introducing new patterns:
+   67947c34ae (convert "hashcmp() != 0" to "!hasheq()", 2018-08-28)
+   b84c783882 (fsck: s/++i > 1/i++/, 2018-10-24)
+
+   Example of fixes using this approach:
+   248f66ed8e (run-command: use strbuf_addstr() for adding a string to
+               a strbuf, 2018-03-25)
+   f919ffebed (Use MOVE_ARRAY, 2018-01-22)
+
+   These types of semantic patches are usually part of testing, c.f.
+   0860a7641b (travis-ci: fail if Coccinelle static analysis found something
+               to transform, 2018-07-23)
+
+ * Using semantic transformations in large scale refactorings throughout
+   the code base.
+
+   When applying the semantic patch into a real patch, sending it to the
+   mailing list in the usual way, such a patch would be expected to have a
+   lot of textual and semantic conflicts as such large scale refactorings
+   change function signatures that are used widely in the code base.
+   A textual conflict would arise if surrounding code near any call of such
+   function changes. A semantic conflict arises when other patch series in
+   flight introduce calls to such functions.
+
+   So to aid these large scale refactorings, semantic patches can be used.
+   However we do not want to store them in the same place as the checks for
+   bad patterns, as then automated builds would fail.
+   That is why semantic patches 'contrib/coccinelle/*.pending.cocci'
+   are ignored for checks, and can be applied using 'make coccicheck-pending'.
+
+   This allows to expose plans of pending large scale refactorings without
+   impacting the bad pattern checks.