diff options
author | Masahiro Yamada <masahiroy@kernel.org> | 2025-06-01 22:31:29 +0900 |
---|---|---|
committer | Masahiro Yamada <masahiroy@kernel.org> | 2025-06-06 05:40:25 +0900 |
commit | a934a57a42f64a40705202f84144b1a29b29f910 (patch) | |
tree | 70cb07a3cbd80fa40d038282ed616c22081a24f2 | |
parent | 3a44052b728e5d96ea425f908e71926364a12f11 (diff) |
scripts/misc-check: check missing #include <linux/export.h> when W=1
The problem was described in commit 5b20755b7780 ("init: move THIS_MODULE
from <linux/export.h> to <linux/init.h>").
To summarize it again here: <linux/export.h> is included by most C files,
even though only some of them actually export symbols. This is because
some headers, such as include/linux/{module.h,linkage}, needlessly
include <linux/export.h>.
I have added a more detailed explanation in the comments of
scripts/misc-check.
This problem will be fixed in two steps:
1. Add #include <linux/export.h> directly to C files that use
EXPORT_SYMBOL()
2. Remove #include <linux/export.h> from header files that do not use
EXPORT_SYMBOL()
This commit addresses step 1; scripts/misc-check will warn about *.[ch]
files that use EXPORT_SYMBOL() but do not include <linux/export.h>.
This check is only triggered when the kernel is built with W=1.
We need to fix 4000+ files. I hope others will help with this effort.
Signed-off-by: Masahiro Yamada <masahiroy@kernel.org>
-rwxr-xr-x | scripts/misc-check | 43 |
1 files changed, 43 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/scripts/misc-check b/scripts/misc-check index 21551d721079..7cb61841a125 100755 --- a/scripts/misc-check +++ b/scripts/misc-check @@ -9,4 +9,47 @@ check_tracked_ignored_files () { sed 's/$/: warning: ignored by one of the .gitignore files/' >&2 } +# Check for missing #include <linux/export.h> +# +# The rule for including <linux/export.h> is very simple: +# Include <linux/export.h> only when you use EXPORT_SYMBOL(). That's it. +# +# However, some headers include <linux/export.h> even though they are completely +# unrelated to EXPORT_SYMBOL(). +# +# One example is include/linux/module.h. Please note <linux/module.h> and +# <linux/export.h> are orthogonal. <linux/module.h> should be included by files +# that can be compiled as modules. In other words, <linux/module.h> should be +# included by EXPORT_SYMBOL consumers. In contrast, <linux/export.h> should be +# included from EXPORT_SYMBOL providers, which may or may not be modular. +# Hence, include/linux/module.h should *not* include <linux/export.h>. +# +# Another example is include/linux/linkage.h, which is completely unrelated to +# EXPORT_SYMBOL(). Worse, it is included by most C files, which means, most C +# files end up including <linux/export.h>, even though only some of them +# actually export symbols. Hence, include/linux/linkage.h should *not* include +# <linux/export.h>. +# +# Before fixing such headers, we must ensure that C files using EXPORT_SYMBOL() +# include <linux/export.h> directly, since many C files currently rely on +# <linux/export.h> being included indirectly (likely, via <linux/linkage> etc.). +# +# Therefore, this check. +# +# The problem is simple - the warned files use EXPORT_SYMBOL(), but do not +# include <linux/export.h>. Please add #include <linux/export.h> to them. +# +# If the included headers are sorted alphabetically, please insert +# <linux/export.h> in the appropriate position to maintain the sort order. +# For this reason, this script only checks missing <linux/export.h>, but +# does not automatically fix it. +check_missing_include_linux_export_h () { + + git -C "${srctree:-.}" grep --files-with-matches -E 'EXPORT_SYMBOL((_NS)?(_GPL)?|_GPL_FOR_MODULES)\(.*\)' \ + -- '*.[ch]' :^tools/ :^include/linux/export.h | + xargs -r git -C "${srctree:-.}" grep --files-without-match '#include[[:space:]]*<linux/export\.h>' | + xargs -r printf "%s: warning: EXPORT_SYMBOL() is used, but #include <linux/export.h> is missing\n" >&2 +} + check_tracked_ignored_files +check_missing_include_linux_export_h |