From: Roman Kononov <kononov195-far@yahoo.com>
To: linux-kernel@vger.kernel.org
Subject: Re: C++ pushback
Date: Thu, 27 Apr 2006 00:37:21 -0500 [thread overview]
Message-ID: <44505891.8080300@yahoo.com> (raw)
In-Reply-To: <4EE8AD21-55B6-4653-AFE9-562AE9958213@mac.com>
Kyle Moffett wrote:
> On Apr 26, 2006, at 22:05:31, Roman Kononov wrote:
>> Kyle Moffett wrote:
>>> On Apr 26, 2006, at 19:00:52, Roman Kononov wrote:
>>>> Linus Torvalds wrote:
>>>>> - some of the C features we use may or may not be usable from
>>>>> C++ (statement expressions?)
>>>>
>>>> Statement expressions are working fine in g++. The main difficulties
>>>> are:
>>>> - GCC's structure member initialization extensions are syntax
>>>> errors in G++: struct foo_t foo={.member=0};
>>>
>>> And that breaks a _massive_ amount of kernel code, including such
>>> core functionality like SPIN_LOCK_UNLOCKED and a host of others.
>>> There are all sorts of macros that use member initialization of that
>>> form.
>>
>> This does not break the code at run time, this breaks the code at
>> compile time, and should be less painful.
>
> So breaking 90% of the source code at compile time is ok? I think not.
> The kernel relies really _really_ heavily on such structure
> initializers, and breaking them would effectively break the world as far
> as the kernel is concerned.
I agree: do not break code, fix it. Make it more robust language-wise.
>>>> G++ compiling heavy C++ is a bit slower than gcc. The g++ front end
>>>> is reliable enough. Do you have a particular bug in mind?
>>>
>>> A lot of people would consider the "significantly slower" to be a
>>> major bug. Many people moaned when the kernel stopped supporting GCC
>>> 2.x because that compiler was much faster than modern C compilers.
>>> I've seen up to a 3x slowdown when compiling the same files with g++
>>> instead of gcc, and such would be unacceptable to a _lot_ of people
>>> on this list.
>>
>> I agree, it would be a bad idea to compile the existing C code by
>> g++. The good idea is to be able to produce new C++ modules etc.
>
> No, this is a reason why C++ modules are _not_ a good idea. If you
> could write the module in C or C++, but in C++ it compiled 100-200%
> slower, then you would write it in C. Why? A simple matter of numbers:
>
> Say it takes you 100 hours to write and debug the module in C++, and 140
> to write and debug it in C. I estimate that at least 200,000 people
> would download and compile a single version of the kernel with your
> module (not an unreasonable estimate). Note that I'm not even including
> the people who do repeated regression testing of versions, or people who
> download and compile multiple versions of the kernel. If the source
> file takes an average of 1.0 seconds to compile in C and 2.0 seconds to
> compile in C++, then:
>
> (2.0 sec - 1.0 sec) * 200,000 = 200,000 seconds = 55.6 hours
> 140 hours - 100 hours = 40 hours
> 40 hours < 55.6 hours
>
> So for a single version of the kernel your module, you've already wasted
> 15.6 hours of time across people using it. Over time that number is
> just going to grow, _especially_ if people start writing more and more
> modules in C++ because they can. If you want to build C++ in the
> kernel, write a compiler that does not include all the problematic C++
> features that add so much parsing time (overloaded operators, etc).
It is hard take this seriously. For people like me, it is 5 times faster
to type and debug C++ code. And debug time is 50 times more expensive
then compile time.
>>>> A lot of C++ features are already supported sanely. You simply need
>>>> to understand them. Especially templates and type checking.
>>>
>>> First of all, the only way to sanely use templated classes is to
>>> write them completely inline, which causes massive bloat. Look at
>>> the kernel "struct list_head" and show me the "type-safe C++" way to
>>> do that. It uses a templated inline class, right? That templated
>>> inline class gets duplicated for each different type of object put in
>>> a linked list, no? Think about how many linked lists we have in the
>>> kernel and tell me why that would be a good thing.
>>
>> You mentioned a bad example. The struct list_head has [almost?] all
>> "members" inlined. If they were not, one could simply make a base
>> class having [some] members outlined, and which class does not enforce
>> type safety and is for inheritance only. The template class would
>> then inherit the base one enforcing type safety by having inline
>> members. This technique is well known, trust me. If you need real life
>> examples, tell me.
>
> Ok, help me understand here: Instead of helping using one sensible data
> structure and generating optimized code for that, the language actively
> _encourages_ you to duplicate classes and interfaces, providing even
> _more_ work for the compiler, making the code harder to debug, and
> probably introducing inefficiencies as well.
The C++ language does not encourage anything like this. Instead it
actively debugs my code. And it does not produce inefficiencies at run
time unless I do something stupid.
> If C++ doesn't work
> properly for a simple and clean example like struct list_head, why
> should we assume that it's going to work any better for more complicated
> examples in the rest of the kernel? Whether or not some arbitrary
> function is inlined should be totally orthogonal to adding type-checking.
You misunderstood something. The struct list_head is indeed a perfect
type to be templatized with all members inlined. C++ works properly in
this case.
>>>> Static constructor issue is trivial.
>>>
>>> How so? When do you want the static constructors to be run? There
>>> are many different major stages of kernel-level initialization;
>>> picking one is likely to make them useless for other code.
>>
>> For #defines core_initcall() ... late_initcall() I would type
>> something like this:
>> class foo_t { foo_t(); ~foo_t(); }
>> static char foo_storage[sizeof(foo_t)];
>> static foo_t& foo=*reinterpret_cast<foo_t*>(foo_storage);
>> static void __init foo_init() { new(foo_storage) foo_t; }
>> core_initcall(foo_init);
>>
>> This ugly-looking code can be nicely wrapped into a template, which,
>> depending on the type (foo_t in this case), at compile time, picks the
>> proper stage for initialization.
>
> You proved my point. Static constructors can't work. You can add silly
> wrapper initcall functions which create objects in static memory at
> various times, but the language-defined static constructors are yet
> another C++ feature that doesn't work by default and has to be hacked
> around. C++ gives us no advantage over C here either.
Nothing works by default. I did not say that static constructors are
advantageous. I said that it is easy for the kernel to make static
constructors working. Global variables should be deprecated anyway.
> Plus this would
> break things like static spinlock initialization. How would you make
> this work sanely for this static declaration:
>
> spinlock_t foo_lock = SPIN_LOCK_UNLOCKED;
>
> Under C that turns into (depending on config options):
>
> spinlock_t foo_lock = { .value = 0, .owner = NULL, (...) };
I would make it exactly like this:
#define SPIN_LOCK_UNLOCKED (spinlock_t){0,-1,whatever}
spinlock_t foo_lock=SPIN_LOCK_UNLOCKED;
This is easy to change. The empty structures look far more painful.
> How could that possibly work in C++ given what you've said? Anything
> that breaks code that simple is an automatic nonstarter for the kernel.
> Also remember that spinlocks are defined preinitialized at the very
> earliest stages of init. Of course I probably don't have to say that
> anything that tries to run a function to iterate over all
> statically-allocated spinlocks during init would be rejected out of hand.
Apparently this would be rejected. Why would it?
Regards
Roman Kononov
next prev parent reply other threads:[~2006-04-27 5:37 UTC|newest]
Thread overview: 196+ messages / expand[flat|nested] mbox.gz Atom feed top
2006-04-24 19:16 Compiling C++ modules Gary Poppitz
2006-04-24 19:27 ` Greg KH
2006-04-24 20:02 ` C++ pushback Gary Poppitz
2006-04-24 20:15 ` Christoph Hellwig
2006-04-24 20:16 ` Greg KH
2006-04-24 20:18 ` Martin Mares
2006-04-24 21:36 ` Jeff V. Merkey
2006-04-24 21:28 ` J.A. Magallon
2006-04-24 21:43 ` Harald Arnesen
2006-04-24 21:52 ` Alan Cox
2006-04-24 22:16 ` J.A. Magallon
2006-04-25 0:05 ` Harald Arnesen
2006-04-25 0:46 ` Diego Calleja
2006-04-25 9:12 ` Harald Arnesen
2006-04-25 1:30 ` linux-os (Dick Johnson)
2006-04-25 2:58 ` marty fouts
2006-04-27 22:55 ` Bill Davidsen
2006-05-02 15:58 ` Randy.Dunlap
2006-05-02 20:36 ` David Schwartz
2006-04-25 8:15 ` Xavier Bestel
2006-04-25 8:42 ` Avi Kivity
2006-04-25 8:52 ` Martin Mares
2006-04-25 9:00 ` Avi Kivity
2006-04-25 9:05 ` Martin Mares
2006-04-25 9:13 ` Avi Kivity
2006-04-25 9:22 ` Xavier Bestel
2006-04-25 20:20 ` J.A. Magallon
2006-04-25 20:31 ` Barry Kelly
2006-04-25 9:09 ` Nikita Danilov
2006-04-25 20:10 ` J.A. Magallon
2006-04-25 18:02 ` Geert Uytterhoeven
2006-04-27 9:09 ` Alexander E. Patrakov
2006-04-24 22:39 ` Willy Tarreau
2006-04-24 22:57 ` Jeff V. Merkey
2006-04-24 23:02 ` David Schwartz
2006-04-25 8:55 ` Martin Mares
2006-04-25 8:59 ` Jan Engelhardt
2006-04-25 14:37 ` David Schwartz
2006-04-25 19:50 ` Martin Mares
2006-04-26 2:33 ` David Schwartz
2006-04-26 3:42 ` Matthew Frost
2006-04-26 19:25 ` David Schwartz
2006-04-26 20:01 ` Jan-Benedict Glaw
2006-04-26 20:09 ` Linus Torvalds
2006-04-26 20:19 ` Al Viro
2006-04-26 21:37 ` Sam Ravnborg
2006-04-28 9:23 ` Avi Kivity
2006-04-28 12:00 ` linux-os (Dick Johnson)
2006-04-28 12:46 ` Jan-Benedict Glaw
2006-04-26 20:25 ` Jan-Benedict Glaw
2006-04-26 20:43 ` David Schwartz
2006-04-26 23:00 ` Roman Kononov
2006-04-27 0:38 ` Kyle Moffett
2006-04-27 2:05 ` Roman Kononov
2006-04-27 3:37 ` Kyle Moffett
2006-04-27 5:37 ` Roman Kononov [this message]
2006-04-27 13:58 ` Michael Buesch
2006-04-27 14:22 ` linux-os (Dick Johnson)
2006-04-27 8:07 ` Avi Kivity
2006-04-27 13:55 ` Denis Vlasenko
2006-04-27 14:27 ` Avi Kivity
2006-04-27 14:56 ` Denis Vlasenko
2006-04-27 15:54 ` Bob Copeland
2006-04-27 16:03 ` Avi Kivity
2006-04-27 15:00 ` Martin Mares
2006-04-27 15:31 ` Avi Kivity
2006-04-27 15:38 ` Martin Mares
2006-04-28 8:16 ` Avi Kivity
2006-04-28 8:30 ` Avi Kivity
2006-04-28 15:47 ` Jan Engelhardt
2006-04-28 15:51 ` Jan Engelhardt
2006-04-28 16:51 ` Avi Kivity
2006-04-27 14:50 ` Sam Ravnborg
2006-04-27 8:50 ` Martin Mares
2006-04-27 3:57 ` Willy Tarreau
2006-04-27 5:53 ` Roman Kononov
2006-04-27 7:55 ` Jan-Benedict Glaw
2006-04-27 17:20 ` C++ pushback (when does this religious thread end?) Leonard Peterson
2006-04-30 17:48 ` C++ pushback Jan Harkes
2006-04-30 20:55 ` David Schwartz
2006-04-26 20:05 ` linux-os (Dick Johnson)
2006-04-26 20:09 ` Xavier Bestel
2006-04-26 20:44 ` Randy.Dunlap
2006-05-02 20:09 ` C++ pushback + sparse Randy.Dunlap
2006-04-27 7:49 ` C++ pushback Jiri Kosina
2006-04-26 21:05 ` Martin Mares
2006-04-25 7:33 ` Avi Kivity
2006-04-25 7:47 ` Nick Piggin
2006-05-13 16:21 ` Esben Nielsen
2006-04-24 20:36 ` Thiago Galesi
2006-04-24 21:38 ` Kurt Wall
2006-04-27 16:17 ` Roman Kononov
2006-04-27 21:59 ` Grant Coady
2006-04-27 22:09 ` Bill Davidsen
2006-04-27 23:19 ` Jan Knutar
2006-04-24 19:30 ` Compiling C++ modules Al Viro
2006-04-24 19:40 ` linux-os (Dick Johnson)
2006-04-24 20:54 ` Geert Uytterhoeven
2006-04-24 19:42 ` Alexey Dobriyan
2006-04-24 20:30 ` Daniel Barkalow
2006-04-24 20:35 ` C++ is in US [Re: Compiling C++ modules] Jiri Slaby
2006-04-24 20:45 ` Compiling C++ modules Alan Cox
2006-04-24 21:03 ` Avi Kivity
2006-04-24 21:23 ` Joshua Hudson
2006-04-24 21:29 ` Kyle Moffett
2006-04-24 21:50 ` marty fouts
2006-04-24 22:09 ` Martin Mares
2006-04-24 22:30 ` Willy Tarreau
2006-04-24 22:32 ` Joshua Hudson
2006-04-24 22:45 ` marty fouts
2006-04-25 15:32 ` Michael Buesch
2006-04-25 7:08 ` Avi Kivity
2006-04-25 10:23 ` James Courtier-Dutton
2006-04-25 15:59 ` Kyle Moffett
2006-04-25 16:46 ` Avi Kivity
2006-04-25 17:10 ` Dmitry Torokhov
2006-04-25 17:19 ` Avi Kivity
2006-04-25 17:28 ` Dmitry Torokhov
2006-04-25 17:53 ` Avi Kivity
2006-04-25 18:04 ` Dmitry Torokhov
2006-04-25 18:08 ` Valdis.Kletnieks
2006-04-25 18:26 ` Avi Kivity
2006-04-25 18:38 ` Avi Kivity
2006-04-25 18:52 ` Michael Poole
2006-04-25 19:13 ` Avi Kivity
2006-04-27 15:10 ` Denis Vlasenko
2006-04-27 20:15 ` Willy Tarreau
2006-04-27 21:08 ` Davi Arnaut
2006-04-28 9:33 ` Avi Kivity
2006-04-28 10:03 ` Avi Kivity
2006-04-28 11:27 ` Sergei Organov
2006-04-28 11:03 ` Martin Mares
2006-04-28 11:30 ` Avi Kivity
2006-04-28 15:56 ` Jan Engelhardt
2006-04-28 17:02 ` Avi Kivity
2006-04-28 17:38 ` linux-os (Dick Johnson)
2006-04-29 2:50 ` Christer Weinigel
2006-05-01 17:46 ` Dave Neuer
2006-05-01 20:21 ` Jan Engelhardt
2006-05-01 23:53 ` David Schwartz
2006-05-02 5:12 ` Willy Tarreau
2006-05-02 10:32 ` Avi Kivity
2006-05-02 11:15 ` Martin Mares
2006-05-02 11:26 ` Avi Kivity
2006-05-02 11:40 ` linux-os (Dick Johnson)
2006-05-02 12:42 ` David Woodhouse
2006-05-02 16:27 ` Christer Weinigel
2006-05-02 12:48 ` Martin Mares
2006-05-02 13:52 ` Avi Kivity
2006-05-02 14:13 ` Al Viro
2006-05-02 14:54 ` Avi Kivity
2006-05-02 16:16 ` Brian Beattie
2006-05-02 16:21 ` Avi Kivity
2006-05-02 13:21 ` Willy Tarreau
2006-05-02 14:41 ` Avi Kivity
2006-05-02 22:25 ` Diego Calleja
2006-05-02 13:34 ` Al Viro
2006-05-02 14:02 ` Avi Kivity
2006-05-02 14:34 ` Al Viro
2006-05-02 15:04 ` Avi Kivity
2006-05-02 15:15 ` Al Viro
2006-05-02 15:19 ` Avi Kivity
2006-05-02 15:27 ` Kyle Moffett
2006-05-02 15:30 ` Avi Kivity
2006-05-02 15:28 ` Al Viro
2006-05-02 15:51 ` Avi Kivity
2006-05-02 15:24 ` Kyle Moffett
2006-05-03 13:13 ` Mark Lord
2006-05-03 20:51 ` David Schwartz
2006-04-30 21:15 ` Eric W. Biederman
2006-04-25 17:54 ` linux-os (Dick Johnson)
2006-04-26 8:30 ` Jan Engelhardt
2006-04-26 11:36 ` linux-os (Dick Johnson)
2006-04-25 19:22 ` Kyle Moffett
2006-04-25 19:54 ` Michael Buesch
2006-04-25 20:24 ` Avi Kivity
2006-04-25 20:11 ` Bongani Hlope
2006-04-25 20:26 ` Avi Kivity
2006-04-25 21:02 ` Valdis.Kletnieks
2006-04-25 21:15 ` Avi Kivity
[not found] ` <71a0d6ff0604251646g4fc90b3dr30a03b8606360e7f@mail.gmail.com>
2006-04-26 4:39 ` Avi Kivity
2006-04-25 17:55 ` Geert Uytterhoeven
2006-04-24 21:58 ` Alan Cox
2006-04-25 7:20 ` Avi Kivity
2006-04-25 9:06 ` Matt Keenan
2006-04-25 20:29 ` Bongani Hlope
2006-04-25 20:37 ` Avi Kivity
2006-04-25 21:08 ` Bongani Hlope
2006-04-25 4:17 ` Martin J. Bligh
2006-04-25 5:30 ` Avi Kivity
2006-04-25 8:58 ` Sam Ravnborg
2006-04-25 7:56 ` Jakob Oestergaard
2006-04-25 9:03 ` Jan Engelhardt
2006-04-24 21:36 ` J.A. Magallon
[not found] <65Jcu-3js-23@gated-at.bofh.it>
[not found] ` <665wi-39E-3@gated-at.bofh.it>
[not found] ` <669JO-WQ-59@gated-at.bofh.it>
[not found] ` <66fcv-Cu-9@gated-at.bofh.it>
2006-04-27 14:23 ` C++ pushback Robert Hancock
2006-04-27 14:41 ` Denis Vlasenko
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