The C standard has the initial value at 0 and the subsequent values incremented by 1. No need to set this explicitely.
This will prevent from artificial "gaps" when compiling out some enum values and having unnecessarily large MAX values & enums arrays. Signed-off-by: Marc-André Lureau <marcandre.lur...@redhat.com> --- scripts/qapi/common.py | 7 ++----- 1 file changed, 2 insertions(+), 5 deletions(-) diff --git a/scripts/qapi/common.py b/scripts/qapi/common.py index 60c1d0a783..68a567f53f 100644 --- a/scripts/qapi/common.py +++ b/scripts/qapi/common.py @@ -2032,14 +2032,11 @@ typedef enum %(c_name)s { ''', c_name=c_name(name)) - i = 0 for value in enum_values: ret += mcgen(''' - %(c_enum)s = %(i)d, + %(c_enum)s, ''', - c_enum=c_enum_const(name, value, prefix), - i=i) - i += 1 + c_enum=c_enum_const(name, value, prefix)) ret += mcgen(''' } %(c_name)s; -- 2.16.2.521.g9aa15f885a