On Tue, 2016-09-20 at 15:14 +0200, Julia Lawall wrote: > The semantic patch below finds a binary operator in a macro and a binary > operator in the use of the macro, and checks if the priority of the > operator in the macro is higher (lower number) than the priority of the > operator in the use. If this is the case, it adds parentheses in the use, > which is not what one wants, but serves to show where the problem is
Thanks, this works on the trivial example I suggested without an #include I've tried it on trivial files with --recursive-includes and it seems to work there too. I'll investigate some more convoluted uses later. btw: There are ~15K checkpatch MACRO_ARG_PRECEDENCE messages in the -next kernel tree. That's probably too many for a theoretical and likely not an actual problem. cheers, Joe