On Mon, 2020-03-09 at 15:48 +0900, Sergey Senozhatsky wrote: > On (20/03/09 15:20), Sergey Senozhatsky wrote: > [..] > > > <shrug, maybe> I've no real opinion about that necessity. > > > > > > fallthrough commments are relatively rarely used as a > > > separating element between case labels. > > > > > > It's by far most common to just have consecutive case labels > > > without any other content. > > > > > > It's somewhere between 500:1 to 1000:1 in the kernel. > > > > I thought that those labels were used by some static code analysis > > tools, so that the removal of some labels raised questions. But I > > don't think I have opinions otherwise. > > ... I guess GCC counts as a static code analysis tool :) > > Looking at previous commits, people wanted to have proper 'fall through' > > > Replace "fallthru" with a proper "fall through" annotation. > This fix is part of the ongoing efforts to enabling > -Wimplicit-fallthrough > > --- > > - case ZPOOL_MM_RW: /* fallthru */ > + case ZPOOL_MM_RW: /* fall through */ That conversion was unnecessary. (there are still 6 /* fallthru */ comments in today's kernel) There are tens of thousands of consecutive case labels without interleaving fallthrough comments in the kernel like: switch (foo) { case BAR: case BAZ: do_something(); break; default: something_else(); break; } So gcc and clang handle consecutive cases without fallthrough without uselessly emitting warnings just fine.