Hi Arnd, On 11/19/21 16:57, Arnd Bergmann wrote: > > From what I can tell, linux/stddef.h is tiny, I don't think it's really > worth optimizing this part. I have spent some time last year > trying to untangle some of the more interesting headers, but ended > up not completing this as there are some really hard problems > once you start getting to the interesting bits. In this case it was not about being worth it or not, but that the fact that adding memberof() would break, unless I use 0 instead of NULL for the implementation of memberof(), which I'm against, or I split stddef. If I don't do either of those, I'm creating a circular dependency, and it doesn't compile. > > The approach I tried was roughly: > > - For each header in the kernel, create a preprocessed version > that includes all the indirect includes, from that start a set > of lookup tables that record which header is eventually included > by which ones, and the size of each preprocessed header in > bytes > > - For a given kernel configuration (e.g. defconfig or allmodconfig) > that I'm most interested in, look at which files are built, and what > the direct includes are in the source files. > > - Sort the headers by the product of the number of direct includes > and the preprocessed size: the largest ones are those that are > worth looking at first. > > - use graphviz to visualize the directed graph showing the includes > between the top 100 headers in that list. You get something like > I had in [1], or the version afterwards at [2]. > > - split out unneeded indirect includes from the headers in the center > of that graph, typically by splitting out struct definitions. > > - repeat. > > The main problem with this approach is that as soon as you start > actually reducing the unneeded indirect includes, you end up with > countless .c files that no longer build because they are missing a > direct include for something that was always included somewhere > deep underneath, so I needed a second set of scripts to add > direct includes to every .c file. > > On the plus side, I did see something on the order of a 30% > compile speed improvement with clang, which is insane > given that this only removed dead definitions. Huh! I'd like to see the kernel some day not having _any_ hidden dependencies. For the moment, since my intent is familiarizing with kernel programming, and not necessarily improving performance considerably (at least not in the first rounds of changes), I prefer starting where it more directly affects what I initially intended to change in the kernel, which in this case was adding memberof(). > >> But I'll note that linux/fs.h, linux/sched.h, linux/mm.h are >> interesting headers for further splitting. >> >> >> BTW, I also have a longstanding doubt about >> how header files are organized in the kernel, >> and which headers can and cannot be included >> from which other files. >> >> For example I see that files in samples or scripts or tools, >> that redefine many things such as offsetof() or ARRAY_SIZE(), >> and I don't know if there's a good reason for that, >> or if I should simply remove all that stuff and >> include <linux/offsetof.h> everywhere I see offsetof() being used. > > The main issue here is that user space code should not > include anything outside of include/uapi/ and arch/*/include/uapi/ Okay. That's good to know. So everything can use uapi code, and uapi code can only use uapi code, right? Every duplicate definition of something outside of uapi should/could be removed. > > offsetof() is defined in include/linux/stddef.h, so this is by > definition not accessible here. It appears that there is also > an include/uapi/linux/stddef.h that is really strange because > it includes linux/compiler_types.h, which in turn is outside > of uapi/. This should probably be fixed. I see. Then, perhaps it would be better to define offsetof() _only_ inside uapi/, and use that definition from everywhere else, and therefore remove the non-uapi version, right? Thanks, Alex -- Alejandro Colomar Linux man-pages comaintainer; https://www.kernel.org/doc/man-pages/ http://www.alejandro-colomar.es/