On Mon,  9 Jul 2018 18:25:09 +0200 Daniel Vetter <daniel.vet...@ffwll.ch> wrote:

> To avoid compilers complainig about ambigious else blocks when putting
> an if condition into a for_each macro one needs to invert the
> condition and add a dummy else. We have a nice little convenience
> macro for that in drm headers, let's move it out. Subsequent patches
> will roll it out to other places.
> 
> The issue the compilers complain about are nested if with an else
> block and no {} to disambiguate which if the else belongs to. The C
> standard is clear, but in practice people forget:
> 
> if (foo)
>       if (bar)
>               /* something */
>       else
>               /* something else

um, yeah, don't do that.  Kernel coding style is very much to do

        if (foo) {
                if (bar)
                        /* something */
                else
                        /* something else
        }

And if not doing that generates a warning then, well, do that.

> The same can happen in a for_each macro when it also contains an if
> condition at the end, except the compiler message is now really
> confusing since there's only 1 if:
> 
> for_each_something()
>       if (bar)
>               /* something */
>       else
>               /* something else
> 
> The for_each_if() macro, by inverting the condition and adding an
> else, avoids the compiler warning.

Ditto.

> Motivated by a discussion with Andy and Yisheng, who want to add
> another for_each_macro which would benefit from for_each_if() instead
> of hand-rolling it.

Ditto.

> v2: Explain a bit better what this is good for, after the discussion
> with Peter Z.

Presumably the above was discussed in whatever-thread-that-was.

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