[Ksummit-2013-discuss] DT bindings as ABI [was: Do we have people interested in device tree janitoring / cleanup?]
Stephen Warren
swarren at wwwdotorg.org
Tue Jul 30 12:40:36 EDT 2013
On 07/29/2013 07:44 PM, David Gibson wrote:
...
> So, by way of investigation, let me propose an alternative
> expression of schemas, that I'm also not convinced we should do,
> but is possible and expressive. It's illustrative, because it's
> kind of the polar opposite approach to XSD: just use C.
That actually sounds reasonable.
But, I think there's a difference between a schema, which defines
what's legal in an abstract fashion, and a validator, which defines
that the data conforms to the schema.
I can see that codding a validator in C would be pretty easy, and even
potentially quite simple/clean given a suitable set of library
functions as you say.
However, I'm not so convinced that expressing the schema itself as C
would work out so well. I think the code/data-structures would end up
being pretty stylized so they could actually be read as a schema. At
that point, a specific schema language would probably be simpler? Of
course, this is all somewhat conjecture; perhaps the only way to tell
would be to prototype various ideas and see how well they work.
Equally, I'm not sure I want to bind the schema definition to a
particular language. I'd like to be able to programatically generate
or manipulate *.dts files in arbitrary languages. Integrating a C
interpreter into those languages in order to handle the schema would
be annoying, whereas directly handling a special-purpose schema
language seems like it'd be more tangible.
As an aside, in the past I toyed with the idea of using Python data
structures as a *.dts syntax, and hence allowing
macros/auto-generation using custom Python code, and I'm sure Forth
will come up sometime in this thread:-)
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