Braces are usually metacharacters in regexes, used to specify a number of repetitions or as part of an escape sequence. If this interpretation is not possible then Perl currently treats them as literal characters. Perl 5.28 has deprecated the literal interpretation of left braces, and Perl 5.32 will remove it (resulting in a fatal error). Escape all left braces that are treated as literal characters. Also escape literal right braces, for consistency and to avoid confusing bracket-matching in text editors. References: https://bugs.debian.org/905116 Signed-off-by: Ben Hutchings <ben@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> --- I tested that the output of "make xmldocs" is identical before and after this change, whether using Perl 5.26 or 5.28. Ben. scripts/kernel-doc | 20 ++++++++++---------- 1 file changed, 10 insertions(+), 10 deletions(-) diff --git a/scripts/kernel-doc b/scripts/kernel-doc index 0057d8eafcc1..8f0f508a78e9 100755 --- a/scripts/kernel-doc +++ b/scripts/kernel-doc @@ -1062,7 +1062,7 @@ sub dump_struct($$) { my $x = shift; my $file = shift; - if ($x =~ /(struct|union)\s+(\w+)\s*{(.*)}/) { + if ($x =~ /(struct|union)\s+(\w+)\s*\{(.*)\}/) { my $decl_type = $1; $declaration_name = $2; my $members = $3; @@ -1148,20 +1148,20 @@ sub dump_struct($$) { } } } - $members =~ s/(struct|union)([^\{\};]+)\{([^\{\}]*)}([^\{\}\;]*)\;/$newmember/; + $members =~ s/(struct|union)([^\{\};]+)\{([^\{\}]*)\}([^\{\}\;]*)\;/$newmember/; } # Ignore other nested elements, like enums - $members =~ s/({[^\{\}]*})//g; + $members =~ s/(\{[^\{\}]*\})//g; create_parameterlist($members, ';', $file, $declaration_name); check_sections($file, $declaration_name, $decl_type, $sectcheck, $struct_actual); # Adjust declaration for better display - $declaration =~ s/([{;])/$1\n/g; - $declaration =~ s/}\s+;/};/g; + $declaration =~ s/([\{;])/$1\n/g; + $declaration =~ s/\}\s+;/};/g; # Better handle inlined enums - do {} while ($declaration =~ s/(enum\s+{[^}]+),([^\n])/$1,\n$2/); + do {} while ($declaration =~ s/(enum\s+\{[^\}]+),([^\n])/$1,\n$2/); my @def_args = split /\n/, $declaration; my $level = 1; @@ -1171,12 +1171,12 @@ sub dump_struct($$) { $clause =~ s/\s+$//; $clause =~ s/\s+/ /; next if (!$clause); - $level-- if ($clause =~ m/(})/ && $level > 1); + $level-- if ($clause =~ m/(\})/ && $level > 1); if (!($clause =~ m/^\s*#/)) { $declaration .= "\t" x $level; } $declaration .= "\t" . $clause . "\n"; - $level++ if ($clause =~ m/({)/ && !($clause =~m/}/)); + $level++ if ($clause =~ m/(\{)/ && !($clause =~m/\}/)); } output_declaration($declaration_name, 'struct', @@ -1244,7 +1244,7 @@ sub dump_enum($$) { # strip #define macros inside enums $x =~ s@#\s*((define|ifdef)\s+|endif)[^;]*;@@gos; - if ($x =~ /enum\s+(\w+)\s*{(.*)}/) { + if ($x =~ /enum\s+(\w+)\s*\{(.*)\}/) { $declaration_name = $1; my $members = $2; my %_members; @@ -1785,7 +1785,7 @@ sub process_proto_type($$) { } while (1) { - if ( $x =~ /([^{};]*)([{};])(.*)/ ) { + if ( $x =~ /([^\{\};]*)([\{\};])(.*)/ ) { if( length $prototype ) { $prototype .= " " }
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