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[bug#54846] [PATCH] gnu: linux: Escape the values of string-type kconfig


From: antlers
Subject: [bug#54846] [PATCH] gnu: linux: Escape the values of string-type kconfig options
Date: Sat, 7 May 2022 21:48:06 -0700

Hi! Still a busy week, working retail will do that, but this
investigation has been on the back burner long enough that it's become
clear; the kernel provides no reliable heuristic for determining the
appropriate escapes for a given option (least of all for out-of-tree
modules). Some options are explicitly expanded in Makefiles, others
aren't but become parts of filenames which are, and every special
character seems to create a syntax error on a whole new layer :c

I'm short on time to write anything up tonight, but have explored the
'behavior of', 'supported escapes within', and 'unsupported characters
of' CONFIG_SYSTEM_*_KEYS, CONFIG_CMDLINE, CONFIG_LOCALVERSION, and
CONFIG_DEFAULT_HOSTNAME (complete with associated errors for
unsupported chars within the set I initially referenced), and would be
glad to follow up with a brief summary purely for posterity; but
there's simply no elegant or complete approach unless this were to be
addressed by upstream(s). It's clearly peeved of me, and I'd take it
to those Makefiles, but for similar issues in out-of-tree modules that
I don't think I could address. It's been a lot of fun though.

I suppose we could factor out the escapes which are common to all
fields (which could be seen as eliminating /a/ layer, that of
Kconfig/conf.c itself), or address only specific common options (not a
serious suggestion!), but these each feel like inelegant solutions
which are more likely to introduce additional confusion when an option
doesn't behave correctly as transcribed out of a .config file, hence
my all-or-nothing mindset.

While I'm here, I once wrote a bash script which would set options via
the kernel's 'config' utility (not worth using over the existing
method of appending to .config, doesn't do any validation), and was
having issues with some configurations because not every option I
tried to set had it's dependency clauses satisfied. This isn't an
issue when using menuconfig because options don't even appear until
their dependencies are satisfied, but scripts can't tell whether the
options they're setting are visible. At the time I just had it
double-check after a run of `make oldconfig` (when validation is
actually done) and emit warnings. I'm not confident that it caught
every issue by just using the 'config' utility or grepping .config,
but it was good enough.

Now, I've got this crazy idea to compile conf.c as a shared library
and link against it at runtime via Guile's FFI, in order to a) learn
how that works(!), and b) use the kernels own utilities to reconstruct
the options-graph (a 'menu' object) and emit correct warnings when
setting options that aren't visible, or even actively ensure
dependencies are satisfied. In brief, would this be Guix-y?





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