This warning was useful when users previously needed to manually build the kernel and run this script. Now you can simply do 'make compile_commands.json', which updates all the necessary build artifacts and automatically creates the compilation database. There is no more worry for a mistake like "Oh, I forgot to build the kernel". Now, this warning is rather annoying. You can create compile_commands.json for an external module: $ make M=/path/to/your/external/module compile_commands.json Then, this warning is displayed since there are usually less than 300 files in a single module. Signed-off-by: Masahiro Yamada <masahiroy@xxxxxxxxxx> --- Changes in v3: - New patch scripts/gen_compile_commands.py | 10 ---------- 1 file changed, 10 deletions(-) diff --git a/scripts/gen_compile_commands.py b/scripts/gen_compile_commands.py index f370375b2f70..1de745577e6d 100755 --- a/scripts/gen_compile_commands.py +++ b/scripts/gen_compile_commands.py @@ -21,11 +21,6 @@ _FILENAME_PATTERN = r'^\..*\.cmd$' _LINE_PATTERN = r'^cmd_[^ ]*\.o := (.* )([^ ]*\.c)$' _VALID_LOG_LEVELS = ['DEBUG', 'INFO', 'WARNING', 'ERROR', 'CRITICAL'] -# A kernel build generally has over 2000 entries in its compile_commands.json -# database. If this code finds 300 or fewer, then warn the user that they might -# not have all the .cmd files, and they might need to compile the kernel. -_LOW_COUNT_THRESHOLD = 300 - def parse_arguments(): """Sets up and parses command-line arguments. @@ -236,11 +231,6 @@ def main(): with open(output, 'wt') as f: json.dump(compile_commands, f, indent=2, sort_keys=True) - count = len(compile_commands) - if count < _LOW_COUNT_THRESHOLD: - logging.warning( - 'Found %s entries. Have you compiled the kernel?', count) - if __name__ == '__main__': main() -- 2.25.1