Merge branch 'gc/doc-cocci-updates'

Update documentation regarding Coccinelle patches.

* gc/doc-cocci-updates:
  cocci: codify authoring and reviewing practices
  cocci: add headings to and reword README
This commit is contained in:
Junio C Hamano 2023-06-13 12:29:45 -07:00
commit 4c7d878df6

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@ -1,7 +1,9 @@
This directory provides examples of Coccinelle (http://coccinelle.lip6.fr/)
semantic patches that might be useful to developers.
= coccinelle
There are two types of semantic patches:
This directory provides Coccinelle (http://coccinelle.lip6.fr/) semantic patches
that might be useful to developers.
== Types of semantic patches
* Using the semantic transformation to check for bad patterns in the code;
The target 'make coccicheck' is designed to check for these patterns and
@ -42,7 +44,7 @@ There are two types of semantic patches:
This allows to expose plans of pending large scale refactorings without
impacting the bad pattern checks.
Git-specific tips & things to know about how we run "spatch":
== Git-specific tips & things to know about how we run "spatch":
* The "make coccicheck" will piggy-back on
"COMPUTE_HEADER_DEPENDENCIES". If you've built a given object file
@ -90,3 +92,33 @@ Git-specific tips & things to know about how we run "spatch":
The absolute times will differ for you, but the relative speedup
from caching should be on that order.
== Authoring and reviewing coccinelle changes
* When a .cocci is made, both the Git changes and .cocci file should be
reviewed. When reviewing such a change, do your best to understand the .cocci
changes (e.g. by asking the author to explain the change) and be explicit
about your understanding of the changes. This helps us decide whether input
from coccinelle experts is needed or not. If you aren't sure of the cocci
changes, indicate what changes you actively endorse and leave an Acked-by
(instead of Reviewed-by).
* Authors should consider that reviewers may not be coccinelle experts, thus the
the .cocci changes may not be self-evident. A plain text description of the
changes is strongly encouraged, especially when using more esoteric features
of the language.
* .cocci rules should target only the problem it is trying to solve; "collateral
damage" is not allowed. Reviewers should look out and flag overly-broad rules.
* Consider the cost-benefit ratio of .cocci changes. In particular, consider the
effect on the runtime of "make coccicheck", and how often your .cocci check
will catch something valuable. As a rule of thumb, rules that can bail early
if a file doesn't have a particular token will have a small impact on runtime,
and vice-versa.
* .cocci files used for refactoring should be temporarily kept in-tree to aid
the refactoring of out-of-tree code (e.g. in-flight topics). Periodically
evaluate the cost-benefit ratio to determine when the file should be removed.
For example, consider how many out-of-tree users are left and how much this
slows down "make coccicheck".