On 04/10/2018 03:04 AM, Antony Pavlov wrote: >>>> +++ b/include/hw/riscv/sifive_uart.h
>>>> + >>>> +typedef struct SiFiveUARTState { >>>> + /*< private >*/ >>>> + SysBusDevice parent_obj; >>> >>> >>> You use SysBusDevive in this header file but there is no 'include >>> "hw/sysbus.h"' in the header file itself. That is, this header is not standalone; a .c file can't use the header unless it first includes hw/sysbus.h prior to sifive_uart.h. >>> >>> Please see my comment >>> https://github.com/riscv/riscv-qemu/pull/130#issuecomment-379640538 >>> >>> >>>> + /*< public >*/ >>>> + qemu_irq irq; >>>> + MemoryRegion mmio; >>>> + CharBackend chr; >>> >>> Just the same thing. CharBackend is defined in "chardev/char-fe.h" please >>> include it. If you were to use a CharBackend*, you could get by with just the typedef. Since all .c files include osdeps.h, which in turn includes typedefs.h, you wouldn't have to include anything if you only refer to the type via a pointer. But here, you are including a full object, so the compiler has to know the size of the type, which means this header DOES depend on "chardev/char-fe.h" being included first (either in this .h to keep it standalone, or in all .c files prior to the point where they include sifive_uart.h). >> >> Honestly, I rather prefer to *not* add more includes to header files >> than we already have. We already have got lots of "touch this header and >> you have to recompile almost the whole QEMU" conditions, so to avoid >> that this situation gets worse, we should rather avoid including headers >> from headers if it is not necessary. Thus if the current sources build >> fine, no need to change anything here. Just my 0.02 €. > > Adding ONLY NECESSARY header files inclusions to header file __can't produce__ > additional recompile efforts. > Moreover this can decrease number of include directives in c-files. My personal preference: if your header only refers to a type via a pointer where the header is still standalone with just the appropriate typedefs, then DON'T include another .h from your header. But if your header has a hard dependency on something not already included by osdeps.h, where failing to include that other header first creates a compile error, then including the .h in your header is appropriate, as it is less work for all .c clients that use your header. The art of reducing compile-time dependencies is figuring out which structs must be included inline (requiring .h in headers), and where you can use pointers, or opaque types that live in .c, or whatever other solutions, so that the headers become lighter-weight. But it is NOT designed to break standalone use of a header (other than the one exception that headers DON'T include osdeps.h because that had to already be included first by all .c files). > > I __rebased__ my RISC-V board in my out-of tree qemu branch > (https://github.com/miet-riscv-workgroup/riscv-qemu/tree/20180409.erizo). I > faced with problem: I have to track dependencies of > header files from include/hw/riscv/ which I use. > > So your "not-add-more-includes-to-header-files" approach has an disadvantage: > if a header file required header list changes, each c-file that includes that > header file > must be edited to update the #include statement list. Indeed, that's why I argue that include statements in .h files that are necessary for standalone compilation of that header is a good idea, and not something to burden every .c file with. -- Eric Blake, Principal Software Engineer Red Hat, Inc. +1-919-301-3266 Virtualization: qemu.org | libvirt.org
signature.asc
Description: OpenPGP digital signature