Am 08.10.19 um 16:43 schrieb Stephen Boyd: > Quoting Johannes Sixt (2019-10-05 07:09:11) >> Am 04.10.19 um 23:30 schrieb Stephen Boyd: >>> --- /dev/null >>> +++ b/t/t4018/dts-nodes-multiline-prop >>> @@ -0,0 +1,12 @@ >>> +/ { >>> + label_1: node1@ff00 { >>> + RIGHT@deadf00,4000 { >>> + multilineprop = <3>, >>> + <4>; >> >> You could insert more lines to demonstrate that "<x>," on a line by >> itself is not picked up. > > Maybe I should add another test? This is is the _multi_line test case, right? ;) Just add one or two lines between the <3> and the <4> that look like common real-world cases to show that those lines won't be picked up. I don't think that another test file is required. >>> +/ { RIGHT /* Technically just supposed to be a slash and brace */ >> >> Devil's advocate here: insert ';' or '=' in the comment, and the line >> would not be picked up. Does that hurt in practice? > > I don't think it hurts in practice so I'd like to ignore it. Sure, no problem. >>> PATTERNS("dts", >>> "!;\n" >>> + "!.*=.*\n" >> >> This behaves the same way as just >> >> "!=\n" >> >> no? >> > > Not exactly. Properties don't always get assigned. I was just refering to the added line, not the combination of the two lines. But while you are speaking of it: > There are boolean > properties that can be tested for by the presence of some string with an > ending semi-colon, like 'this-is-true;'. If we just check for not equal > to a line with a semicolon and newline then we'll see boolean > properties. Should I add that as another test? I agree that a test case with a Boolean property would be great. -- Hannes