Please don't replace numeric parameter like 0444 with macro
Al Viro
viro at ZenIV.linux.org.uk
Tue Aug 2 17:42:26 PDT 2016
On Tue, Aug 02, 2016 at 04:58:29PM -0400, Linus Torvalds wrote:
> [ So I answered similarly to another patch, but I'll just re-iterate
> and change the subject line so that it stands out a bit from the
> millions of actual patches ]
>
> On Tue, Aug 2, 2016 at 1:42 PM, Pavel Machek <pavel at ucw.cz> wrote:
> >
> > Everyone knows what 0644 is, but noone can read S_IRUSR | S_IWUSR |
> > S_IRCRP | S_IROTH (*). Please don't do this.
>
> Absolutely. It's *much* easier to parse and understand the octal
> numbers, while the symbolic macro names are just random line noise and
> hard as hell to understand. You really have to think about it.
>
> So we should rather go the other way: convert existing bad symbolic
> permission bit macro use to just use the octal numbers.
>
> The symbolic names are good for the *other* bits (ie sticky bit, and
> the inode mode _type_ numbers etc), but for the permission bits, the
> symbolic names are just insane crap. Nobody sane should ever use them.
> Not in the kernel, not in user space.
Except that you are inviting the mixes like S_IFDIR | 17 /* oops, should've
been 017, or do we spell it 0017? */ that way. I certainly agree that this
patch series had been a huge pile of manure, but "let's convert it in other
direction" is inviting pretty much the same thing, with lovely potential for
typos, etc.
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