On Thu, Jan 21, 2021 at 5:11 AM Will Deacon <will@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > On Wed, Jan 20, 2021 at 11:02:06AM -0800, Linus Torvalds wrote: > > On Wed, Jan 20, 2021 at 10:27 AM Nick Desaulniers > > <ndesaulniers@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > > > > > Is there a difference between: [ const unnamed struct and individual const members ] > > > > Semantically? No. > > > > Syntactically the "group the const members together" is a lot cleaner, > > imho. Not just from a "just a single const" standpoint, but from a > > "code as documentation" standpoint. > > > > But I guess to avoid the clang issue, we could do the "mark individual > > fields" thing. > > I'd prefer to wait until the bug against LLVM has been resolved before we > try to work around anything. Although I couldn't find any other examples > like this in the kernel, requiring all of the member fields to be marked as > 'const' still feels pretty fragile to me; it's only a matter of time before > new non-const fields get added, at which point the temptation for developers > to remove 'const' from other fields when it gets in the way is pretty high. What's to stop a new non-const field from getting added outside the const qualified anonymous struct? What's to stop someone from removing const from the anonymous struct? What's to stop a number of callers from manipulating the structure temporarily before restoring it when returning by casting away the const? Code review. Using a non-toolchain-portable solution certainly could be considered more fragile. It's always possible that the resolution is the C standards body goes the C++ route, at which point GCC would be forced to address this and potentially change behavior. Kind of like how people avoid going to court since things are never guaranteed to work out in their favor. > > None of this is bullet-proof, of course, but if clang ends up emitting a > warning (even if it's gated behind an option) then I think we're in a good > place. > > > (It turns out that sparse gets this wrong too, so it's not just clang). > > Adding Luc, as hopefully that's fixable. > > Will -- Thanks, ~Nick Desaulniers