On Fri, 2019-04-26 at 19:17 +0200, Johannes Berg wrote: > > Ideally, we'd add this as > > { > .cmd = XYZ, > .doit = do_xyz, > .dumpit = dump_xyz, > .attrs = { ATTR_A, ATTR_B, ATTR_C, ATTR_D }, > } > > but of course there's no good way to express this in C, you'd have to > build an out-of-line array and point to it. Actually, it's possibly even more complicated. After all, it is possible that you have an ATTR_N, that is nested, and that contains certain sub- attributes (ATTR_N_A, ATTR_N_B, ...) of which only some are valid for the operation X, but a different subset is valid for operation Y. I'm sort of hoping we don't have enough of these cases to make it really something we want to express, because that'll be really hard to express in a way that we can validate and expose. > The issue with C I noted above of course does lend itself really well to > expressing it in a DSL and then generating the C code, but even *then* I > would still argue that having all of this duplicated is a waste of > memory since we need to have the same data already. And also, in addition to this, I just realized that we really don't want any sort of separate descriptions because we want to have the ability to validate everything that we express to userspace. IOW - if we tell userspace "this is valid" then we should at the same time be able to use those description data structures to actually validate that userspace isn't sending us something out of this spec. So I guess that's just one more reason I think that we fundamentally must provide to userspace exactly what we validate, and make the validation data structures (or language) expressive enough to be able to capture the real constraints. johannes