Files
nginx-unit/src/nxt_job.h
Alejandro Colomar 952bcc50bf Fixed #define style.
We had a mix of styles for declaring function-like macros:

Style A:
 #define                    \
 foo()                      \
     do {                   \
         ...                \
     } while (0)

Style B:
 #define foo()              \
     do {                   \
         ...                \
     } while (0)

We had a similar number of occurences of each style:

 $ grep -rnI '^\w*(.*\\' | wc -l
 244
 $ grep -rn 'define.*(.*)' | wc -l
 239

(Those regexes aren't perfect, but a very decent approximation.)

Real examples:

 $ find src -type f | xargs sed -n '/^nxt_double_is_zero/,/^$/p'
 nxt_double_is_zero(f)                                                         \
     (fabs(f) <= FLT_EPSILON)

 $ find src -type f | xargs sed -n '/define nxt_http_field_set/,/^$/p'
 #define nxt_http_field_set(_field, _name, _value)                             \
     do {                                                                      \
         (_field)->name_length = nxt_length(_name);                            \
         (_field)->value_length = nxt_length(_value);                          \
         (_field)->name = (u_char *) _name;                                    \
         (_field)->value = (u_char *) _value;                                  \
     } while (0)

I'd like to standardize on a single style for them, and IMO,
having the identifier in the same line as #define is a better
option for the following reasons:

- Programmers are used to `#define foo() ...` (readability).
- One less line of code.
- The program for finding them is really simple (see below).

 function grep_ngx_func()
 {
     if (($# != 1)); then
         >&2 echo "Usage: ${FUNCNAME[0]} <func>";
         return 1;
     fi;

     find src -type f \
     | grep '\.[ch]$' \
     | xargs grep -l "$1" \
     | sort \
     | xargs pcregrep -Mn "(?s)^\$[\w\s*]+?^$1\(.*?^}";

     find src -type f \
     | grep '\.[ch]$' \
     | xargs grep -l "$1" \
     | sort \
     | xargs pcregrep -Mn "(?s)define $1\(.*?^$" \
     | sed -E '1s/^[^:]+:[0-9]+:/&\n\n/';
 }

 $ grep_ngx_func
 Usage: grep_ngx_func <func>

 $ grep_ngx_func nxt_http_field_set
 src/nxt_http.h:98:

 #define nxt_http_field_set(_field, _name, _value)                             \
     do {                                                                      \
         (_field)->name_length = nxt_length(_name);                            \
         (_field)->value_length = nxt_length(_value);                          \
         (_field)->name = (u_char *) _name;                                    \
         (_field)->value = (u_char *) _value;                                  \
     } while (0)

 $ grep_ngx_func nxt_sprintf
 src/nxt_sprintf.c:56:

 u_char * nxt_cdecl
 nxt_sprintf(u_char *buf, u_char *end, const char *fmt, ...)
 {
     u_char   *p;
     va_list  args;

     va_start(args, fmt);
     p = nxt_vsprintf(buf, end, fmt, args);
     va_end(args);

     return p;
 }

................
Scripted change:
................

$ find src -type f \
  | grep '\.[ch]$' \
  | xargs sed -i '/define *\\$/{N;s/ *\\\n/ /;s/        //}'
2022-05-03 12:11:14 +02:00

87 lines
2.3 KiB
C

/*
* Copyright (C) Igor Sysoev
* Copyright (C) NGINX, Inc.
*/
#ifndef _NXT_JOB_H_INCLUDED_
#define _NXT_JOB_H_INCLUDED_
/*
* A job may run by separate thread, so each job should have its
* its own mem_pool. A job itself is allocated from this mem_pool.
* On job completion a job initiator can destroy the job at once
* with nxt_job_destroy() or can postpone the destruction with
* nxt_job_cleanup_add(), if the initiator uses data from the job's
* mem_pool.
*
* Several child jobs may run in context of another job in the same
* thread. In this case the child job may use a mem_pool of the
* parent job and the child job is allocated using the mem_pool's cache.
* nxt_job_destroy() just returns the job to the cache. All job
* allocations however still remain in the parent mem_pool.
*
* The first thread in job thread pool is created on demand. If this
* operation fails the job abort handler is called. It also is called
* if the job is canceled. To avoid race condition the abort handler
* always runs in context of a thread initiated the job. The abort
* handler may be as simple as nxt_job_destroy().
*/
typedef struct {
void *data;
nxt_task_t *task;
nxt_work_handler_t abort_handler;
uint16_t cache_size;
uint8_t cancel; /* 1 bit */
nxt_mp_t *mem_pool;
nxt_queue_link_t link;
nxt_thread_pool_t *thread_pool;
nxt_event_engine_t *engine;
nxt_log_t *log;
nxt_work_t work;
#if (NXT_DEBUG)
const char *name;
#endif
} nxt_job_t;
NXT_EXPORT void *nxt_job_create(nxt_mp_t *mp, size_t size);
NXT_EXPORT void nxt_job_init(nxt_job_t *job, size_t size);
NXT_EXPORT void nxt_job_destroy(nxt_task_t *task, void *data);
NXT_EXPORT nxt_int_t nxt_job_cleanup_add(nxt_mp_t *mp, nxt_job_t *job);
NXT_EXPORT void nxt_job_start(nxt_task_t *task, nxt_job_t *job,
nxt_work_handler_t handler);
NXT_EXPORT void nxt_job_return(nxt_task_t *task, nxt_job_t *job,
nxt_work_handler_t handler);
#define nxt_job_cancel(job) \
(job)->cancel = 1
#if (NXT_DEBUG)
#define nxt_job_set_name(job, text) \
(job)->name = text
#else
#define nxt_job_set_name(job, text)
#endif
#endif /* _NXT_JOB_H_INCLUDED_ */