Jesse Pollard wrote:
> Personally, I think
> proc_printf(fragment, "%d %d",get_portnum(usbdev), usbdev->maxchild);
> (or the string "dddd ddd" with d representing a digit)
>
> is shorter (and faster) to parse with
> fscanf(input,"%d %d",&usbdev,&maxchild);
>
> Than it would be to try parsing
> <usb:topology port="ddddd" portnum="dddd">
> with an XML parser.
>
> Sorry - XML is good for some things. It is not designed to be a
> interface language between a kernel and user space.
>
> I am NOT in favor of "one file per value", but structured data needs
> to be written in a reasonable, concise manner. XML is intended for
> communication between disparate systems in an exreemly precise manner
> to allow some self documentation to be included when the communication
> fails.
Agreed.
But one thing XML provides (potentially) is a DTD that defines meanings and formats.
IMHO the kernel needs something like this for /proc (though not in DTD format!).
Has anyone ever tried to write a formal syntax for all the entries
in /proc? We have bits and pieces of /proc documentation in
/usr/src/linux/Documentation, but nothing you could feed directly
into a parser generator. It'd be neat to have a good definition for /proc
in the LSB, and have an LSB conformance test that could look in
/proc and say "Yup, all the entries there conform to the spec and can
be parsed properly."
(http://www.pathname.com/fhs/2.2-beta/fhs-2.2-beta.txt mentions /proc,
but doesn't standardize any of it, except to suggest that /etc/mtab
can be a symbolic link to /proc/mounts.)
- Dan
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This archive was generated by hypermail 2b29 : Mon Apr 30 2001 - 21:00:14 EST