Work-around a somewhat complex interaction within the code. From
Piotr's commit [1]:
When pr_comment() calls dump_line() for the first line of a multiline
comment, it doesn't include any indentation - it starts with the "/*".
This is consistent for both boxed and not boxed comments. Where the logic
diverges is in how it treats the rest of the lines of the comment. For box
comments indent assumes that it must not change anything, so lines are
dumped as they were, including the indentation where it exists. For the
rest of comments, it will first remove the indentation to store plain text
of the comment and then add it again where indent thinks it's appropriate
-- this is part of comment re-indenting process.
For continuations of multi-line comments, the code that handles comments
in dump_line() will use pad_output() to create indentation from the
beginning of the line (what indent calls the first column) and then write
string pointed by s_com afterwards. But if it's a box comment, the string
will include original indentation, unless it's the first line of the
comment. This is why tab characters from s_com have to be considered when
calculating how much padding is needed and the "while (*com_st == '\t')
com_st++, target += 8;" does that.
In dump_line(), /target/ is initially set to ps.com_col, so it always
assumes that indentation needs to be produced in this function, regardless
of which line of a box comment it is. But for the first line of a box
comment it is not true, so pr_comment() signals it by setting
ps.n_comment_delta, the negative comment delta, to a negative number which
is then added to /target/ in dump_line() on all lines except the first
one, so that the function produces adequate indentation in this special
case.
The bug was in how that negative offset was calculated: pr_comment() used
count_spaces() on in_buffer, which pr_comment() expected to contain
non-null terminated sequence of characters, originating from whatever
originally was on the left side of the comment. Understanding that
count_spaces() requires a string, pr_comment() temporarily set buf_ptr[-2]
to 0 in hope that it would nul-terminate the right thing in in_buffer and
calling count_spaces() would be safe and do the expected thing. This was
false whenever buf_ptr would point into save_com, an entirely different
char array than in_buffer.
The short-term fix is to recognize whether buf_ptr points into in_buffer
or save_com.
Reference:
[1]
ea486a2aa3
Taken from: Piotr Stefaniak
It's pr_comment.c that should decide whether to put a "star comment
continuation" or not. This duplicates code a bit, but it simplifies
pr_comment() at the same time since pr_comment() no longer has to "signal"
whether a star continuation is needed or not.
This change requires indent(1) to not wrap comment lines that lack a blank
character, but I think it's for the better if you look at cases when that
happens (mostly long URIs and file system paths, which arguably shouldn't
be wrapped).
It also fixes two bugs:
1. Cases where asterisk is a part of the comment's content (like in "*we*
are the champions") and happens to appear at the beginning of the line,
misleading dump_line() into thinking that this is part of the star comment
continuation, leading to misalignment.
2. Cases where blank starred lines had three too many characters on the
line when wrapped.
Reference:
3b41ee78aa
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D6966 (Partial)
Submitted by: Piotr Stefaniak
Modify count_spaces() to take a third parameter "end" that will make the
function return when the end is reached. This lets the caller pass a
pointer to non nul-terminated sequence of characters. Rename
count_spaces() to count_spaces_until() and reinstate count_spaces(), this
time based on count_spaces_until().
Use count_spaces_until() to recalculate current column when going through
a comment just before the fragment which decides if current line of the
comment should be wrapped. This move simplifies this code by eliminating
the need for keeping the column counter up to date every time e_com is
advanced and also reduces spread of code that has to know how many columns
a tab will produce.
Deduplicate code that decided if a comment needs a blank line at the top.
References:
d9fa3b481527185b4b33
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D6966 (Partial)
Submitted by: Piotr Stefaniak
strchr(3) returns a pointer not a boolean.
Attempt to make the style somewhat more ocnsistent with what indent
had before recent changes.
Pointed out by: bde
This piece of code removed tabs and space characters from after colons
that follow labels by decrementing the e_lab (end of label) "pointer"
which is later used to calculate the width of the string that fprintf()
puts into "output". But pad_output() gets the length from the actual
string, so it miscalculated what the current column is.
Fixed by putting a string terminator at the e_lab "pointer".
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D6966
(Partial)
Obtained from: Piotr Stefaniak
declarations with the opening brace on the same line as the declaration
of arguments all spaces and no tabs (a feature which exists in GNU's
indent). Man page update to follow RSN.
PR: bin/67983
Submitted by: Chip Norkus <wd@teleri.net>
Style guidance and bug for bug compatibility by: bde
MFC after: 2 weeks
parentheses if the continuation indent is exactly half of the main
indent. Indenting one contination indent for every level of
parentheses gives bad results in most cases and is not what is done
in about 90% of properly hand-formatted KNF code (sys/kern/*.c,
nvi/common/*.c). The main advantage of the non-default KNF options
-nlp -ci4 is that continuation lines don't accidentally line up with
the next main indentation level or march to the right, and increasing
their indentation defeats this.
This behaviour change is limited to when the continuation indent is
exactly half of the main indent to avoid adding yet another option.
2) Cast ifdef_level to a size_t before comparing it to a ratio of size_ts.
Ifdef_level should always be positive.
3) Complete prototype for chfont.
4) Cast some ptrdiff_ts to ints before using as a field width.
5) Avoid shadowing a local variable p with another local variable p.
- ANSIfy function declarations
- braces around initializers structs within structs
- add parens in complicated expressions
- disambiguate dangling elses
- no more implicit int
- make functions static where possible
- use prototypes
- don't use varargs hack for diag()
Requested by: joerg
MFC after: 2 weeks