linux_dsm_epyc7002/Documentation/sphinx/automarkup.py
Jonathan Neuschäfer 82bf829b69 Documentation: sphinx: Don't parse socket() as identifier reference
With the introduction of Documentation/sphinx/automarkup.py, socket() is
parsed as a reference to the in-kernel definition of socket. Sphinx then
decides that struct socket is a good match, which is usually not
intended, when the syscall is meant instead. This was observed in
Documentation/networking/af_xdp.rst.

Prevent socket() from being misinterpreted by adding it to the Skipfuncs
list in automarkup.py.

Signed-off-by: Jonathan Neuschäfer <j.neuschaefer@gmx.net>
Reviewed-by: Mauro Carvalho Chehab <mchehab+samsung@kernel.org>
Signed-off-by: Jonathan Corbet <corbet@lwn.net>
2019-08-12 14:55:30 -06:00

103 lines
3.5 KiB
Python

# SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0
# Copyright 2019 Jonathan Corbet <corbet@lwn.net>
#
# Apply kernel-specific tweaks after the initial document processing
# has been done.
#
from docutils import nodes
from sphinx import addnodes
from sphinx.environment import NoUri
import re
#
# Regex nastiness. Of course.
# Try to identify "function()" that's not already marked up some
# other way. Sphinx doesn't like a lot of stuff right after a
# :c:func: block (i.e. ":c:func:`mmap()`s" flakes out), so the last
# bit tries to restrict matches to things that won't create trouble.
#
RE_function = re.compile(r'([\w_][\w\d_]+\(\))')
#
# Many places in the docs refer to common system calls. It is
# pointless to try to cross-reference them and, as has been known
# to happen, somebody defining a function by these names can lead
# to the creation of incorrect and confusing cross references. So
# just don't even try with these names.
#
Skipfuncs = [ 'open', 'close', 'read', 'write', 'fcntl', 'mmap',
'select', 'poll', 'fork', 'execve', 'clone', 'ioctl',
'socket' ]
#
# Find all occurrences of function() and try to replace them with
# appropriate cross references.
#
def markup_funcs(docname, app, node):
cdom = app.env.domains['c']
t = node.astext()
done = 0
repl = [ ]
for m in RE_function.finditer(t):
#
# Include any text prior to function() as a normal text node.
#
if m.start() > done:
repl.append(nodes.Text(t[done:m.start()]))
#
# Go through the dance of getting an xref out of the C domain
#
target = m.group(1)[:-2]
target_text = nodes.Text(target + '()')
xref = None
if target not in Skipfuncs:
lit_text = nodes.literal(classes=['xref', 'c', 'c-func'])
lit_text += target_text
pxref = addnodes.pending_xref('', refdomain = 'c',
reftype = 'function',
reftarget = target, modname = None,
classname = None)
#
# XXX The Latex builder will throw NoUri exceptions here,
# work around that by ignoring them.
#
try:
xref = cdom.resolve_xref(app.env, docname, app.builder,
'function', target, pxref, lit_text)
except NoUri:
xref = None
#
# Toss the xref into the list if we got it; otherwise just put
# the function text.
#
if xref:
repl.append(xref)
else:
repl.append(target_text)
done = m.end()
if done < len(t):
repl.append(nodes.Text(t[done:]))
return repl
def auto_markup(app, doctree, name):
#
# This loop could eventually be improved on. Someday maybe we
# want a proper tree traversal with a lot of awareness of which
# kinds of nodes to prune. But this works well for now.
#
# The nodes.literal test catches ``literal text``, its purpose is to
# avoid adding cross-references to functions that have been explicitly
# marked with cc:func:.
#
for para in doctree.traverse(nodes.paragraph):
for node in para.traverse(nodes.Text):
if not isinstance(node.parent, nodes.literal):
node.parent.replace(node, markup_funcs(name, app, node))
def setup(app):
app.connect('doctree-resolved', auto_markup)
return {
'parallel_read_safe': True,
'parallel_write_safe': True,
}