As noted in the preceding commit our "UNUSED" macro was no longer protecting against actual use of the "unused" variables, which it was previously doing by renaming the variable. Let's instead use the "deprecated" attribute to accomplish that goal. As [1] rightly notes this has the drawback that compiling with "-Wno-deprecated-declarations" will silence any such uses. I think the trade-off is worth it as: * We can consider that a feature, as e.g. backporting certain patches might use a now "unused" parameter, and the person doing that might want to silence it with DEVOPTS=no-error. * This way we play nicely with coccinelle, and any other dumb(er) parser of C (such as syntax highlighters). * Not every single compilation of git needs to catch "used but declared unused" parameters. It's sufficient that the default "make DEVELOPER=1" will do so, and that the "static-analysis" CI job will catch it. 1. https://lore.kernel.org/git/YwCtkwjWdJVHHZV0@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx/ Signed-off-by: Ævar Arnfjörð Bjarmason <avarab@xxxxxxxxx> --- git-compat-util.h | 3 ++- 1 file changed, 2 insertions(+), 1 deletion(-) diff --git a/git-compat-util.h b/git-compat-util.h index 5ea7be97493..71a004be409 100644 --- a/git-compat-util.h +++ b/git-compat-util.h @@ -190,7 +190,8 @@ struct strbuf; #define _SGI_SOURCE 1 #if defined(__GNUC__) -#define UNUSED __attribute__((unused)) +#define UNUSED __attribute__((unused)) \ + __attribute__((deprecated ("parameter declared as UNUSED"))) #else #define UNUSED #endif -- 2.37.2.1279.g8741a0e3ea3