| Writing kernel-doc comments |
| =========================== |
| |
| The Linux kernel source files may contain structured documentation |
| comments in the kernel-doc format to describe the functions, types |
| and design of the code. It is easier to keep documentation up-to-date |
| when it is embedded in source files. |
| |
| .. note:: The kernel-doc format is deceptively similar to javadoc, |
| gtk-doc or Doxygen, yet distinctively different, for historical |
| reasons. The kernel source contains tens of thousands of kernel-doc |
| comments. Please stick to the style described here. |
| |
| The kernel-doc structure is extracted from the comments, and proper |
| `Sphinx C Domain`_ function and type descriptions with anchors are |
| generated from them. The descriptions are filtered for special kernel-doc |
| highlights and cross-references. See below for details. |
| |
| .. _Sphinx C Domain: http://www.sphinx-doc.org/en/stable/domains.html |
| |
| Every function that is exported to loadable modules using |
| ``EXPORT_SYMBOL`` or ``EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL`` should have a kernel-doc |
| comment. Functions and data structures in header files which are intended |
| to be used by modules should also have kernel-doc comments. |
| |
| It is good practice to also provide kernel-doc formatted documentation |
| for functions externally visible to other kernel files (not marked |
| ``static``). We also recommend providing kernel-doc formatted |
| documentation for private (file ``static``) routines, for consistency of |
| kernel source code layout. This is lower priority and at the discretion |
| of the maintainer of that kernel source file. |
| |
| How to format kernel-doc comments |
| --------------------------------- |
| |
| The opening comment mark ``/**`` is used for kernel-doc comments. The |
| ``kernel-doc`` tool will extract comments marked this way. The rest of |
| the comment is formatted like a normal multi-line comment with a column |
| of asterisks on the left side, closing with ``*/`` on a line by itself. |
| |
| The function and type kernel-doc comments should be placed just before |
| the function or type being described in order to maximise the chance |
| that somebody changing the code will also change the documentation. The |
| overview kernel-doc comments may be placed anywhere at the top indentation |
| level. |
| |
| Running the ``kernel-doc`` tool with increased verbosity and without actual |
| output generation may be used to verify proper formatting of the |
| documentation comments. For example:: |
| |
| scripts/kernel-doc -v -none drivers/foo/bar.c |
| |
| The documentation format is verified by the kernel build when it is |
| requested to perform extra gcc checks:: |
| |
| make W=n |
| |
| Function documentation |
| ---------------------- |
| |
| The general format of a function and function-like macro kernel-doc comment is:: |
| |
| /** |
| * function_name() - Brief description of function. |
| * @arg1: Describe the first argument. |
| * @arg2: Describe the second argument. |
| * One can provide multiple line descriptions |
| * for arguments. |
| * |
| * A longer description, with more discussion of the function function_name() |
| * that might be useful to those using or modifying it. Begins with an |
| * empty comment line, and may include additional embedded empty |
| * comment lines. |
| * |
| * The longer description may have multiple paragraphs. |
| * |
| * Context: Describes whether the function can sleep, what locks it takes, |
| * releases, or expects to be held. It can extend over multiple |
| * lines. |
| * Return: Describe the return value of foobar. |
| * |
| * The return value description can also have multiple paragraphs, and should |
| * be placed at the end of the comment block. |
| */ |
| |
| The brief description following the function name may span multiple lines, and |
| ends with an argument description, a blank comment line, or the end of the |
| comment block. |
| |
| Function parameters |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| Each function argument should be described in order, immediately following |
| the short function description. Do not leave a blank line between the |
| function description and the arguments, nor between the arguments. |
| |
| Each ``@argument:`` description may span multiple lines. |
| |
| .. note:: |
| |
| If the ``@argument`` description has multiple lines, the continuation |
| of the description should start at the same column as the previous line:: |
| |
| * @argument: some long description |
| * that continues on next lines |
| |
| or:: |
| |
| * @argument: |
| * some long description |
| * that continues on next lines |
| |
| If a function has a variable number of arguments, its description should |
| be written in kernel-doc notation as:: |
| |
| * @...: description |
| |
| Function context |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| The context in which a function can be called should be described in a |
| section named ``Context``. This should include whether the function |
| sleeps or can be called from interrupt context, as well as what locks |
| it takes, releases and expects to be held by its caller. |
| |
| Examples:: |
| |
| * Context: Any context. |
| * Context: Any context. Takes and releases the RCU lock. |
| * Context: Any context. Expects <lock> to be held by caller. |
| * Context: Process context. May sleep if @gfp flags permit. |
| * Context: Process context. Takes and releases <mutex>. |
| * Context: Softirq or process context. Takes and releases <lock>, BH-safe. |
| * Context: Interrupt context. |
| |
| Return values |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| The return value, if any, should be described in a dedicated section |
| named ``Return``. |
| |
| .. note:: |
| |
| #) The multi-line descriptive text you provide does *not* recognize |
| line breaks, so if you try to format some text nicely, as in:: |
| |
| * Return: |
| * 0 - OK |
| * -EINVAL - invalid argument |
| * -ENOMEM - out of memory |
| |
| this will all run together and produce:: |
| |
| Return: 0 - OK -EINVAL - invalid argument -ENOMEM - out of memory |
| |
| So, in order to produce the desired line breaks, you need to use a |
| ReST list, e. g.:: |
| |
| * Return: |
| * * 0 - OK to runtime suspend the device |
| * * -EBUSY - Device should not be runtime suspended |
| |
| #) If the descriptive text you provide has lines that begin with |
| some phrase followed by a colon, each of those phrases will be taken |
| as a new section heading, which probably won't produce the desired |
| effect. |
| |
| Structure, union, and enumeration documentation |
| ----------------------------------------------- |
| |
| The general format of a struct, union, and enum kernel-doc comment is:: |
| |
| /** |
| * struct struct_name - Brief description. |
| * @member1: Description of member1. |
| * @member2: Description of member2. |
| * One can provide multiple line descriptions |
| * for members. |
| * |
| * Description of the structure. |
| */ |
| |
| You can replace the ``struct`` in the above example with ``union`` or |
| ``enum`` to describe unions or enums. ``member`` is used to mean struct |
| and union member names as well as enumerations in an enum. |
| |
| The brief description following the structure name may span multiple |
| lines, and ends with a member description, a blank comment line, or the |
| end of the comment block. |
| |
| Members |
| ~~~~~~~ |
| |
| Members of structs, unions and enums should be documented the same way |
| as function parameters; they immediately succeed the short description |
| and may be multi-line. |
| |
| Inside a struct or union description, you can use the ``private:`` and |
| ``public:`` comment tags. Structure fields that are inside a ``private:`` |
| area are not listed in the generated output documentation. |
| |
| The ``private:`` and ``public:`` tags must begin immediately following a |
| ``/*`` comment marker. They may optionally include comments between the |
| ``:`` and the ending ``*/`` marker. |
| |
| Example:: |
| |
| /** |
| * struct my_struct - short description |
| * @a: first member |
| * @b: second member |
| * @d: fourth member |
| * |
| * Longer description |
| */ |
| struct my_struct { |
| int a; |
| int b; |
| /* private: internal use only */ |
| int c; |
| /* public: the next one is public */ |
| int d; |
| }; |
| |
| Nested structs/unions |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| It is possible to document nested structs and unions, like:: |
| |
| /** |
| * struct nested_foobar - a struct with nested unions and structs |
| * @memb1: first member of anonymous union/anonymous struct |
| * @memb2: second member of anonymous union/anonymous struct |
| * @memb3: third member of anonymous union/anonymous struct |
| * @memb4: fourth member of anonymous union/anonymous struct |
| * @bar: non-anonymous union |
| * @bar.st1: struct st1 inside @bar |
| * @bar.st2: struct st2 inside @bar |
| * @bar.st1.memb1: first member of struct st1 on union bar |
| * @bar.st1.memb2: second member of struct st1 on union bar |
| * @bar.st2.memb1: first member of struct st2 on union bar |
| * @bar.st2.memb2: second member of struct st2 on union bar |
| */ |
| struct nested_foobar { |
| /* Anonymous union/struct*/ |
| union { |
| struct { |
| int memb1; |
| int memb2; |
| } |
| struct { |
| void *memb3; |
| int memb4; |
| } |
| } |
| union { |
| struct { |
| int memb1; |
| int memb2; |
| } st1; |
| struct { |
| void *memb1; |
| int memb2; |
| } st2; |
| } bar; |
| }; |
| |
| .. note:: |
| |
| #) When documenting nested structs or unions, if the struct/union ``foo`` |
| is named, the member ``bar`` inside it should be documented as |
| ``@foo.bar:`` |
| #) When the nested struct/union is anonymous, the member ``bar`` in it |
| should be documented as ``@bar:`` |
| |
| In-line member documentation comments |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| The structure members may also be documented in-line within the definition. |
| There are two styles, single-line comments where both the opening ``/**`` and |
| closing ``*/`` are on the same line, and multi-line comments where they are each |
| on a line of their own, like all other kernel-doc comments:: |
| |
| /** |
| * struct foo - Brief description. |
| * @foo: The Foo member. |
| */ |
| struct foo { |
| int foo; |
| /** |
| * @bar: The Bar member. |
| */ |
| int bar; |
| /** |
| * @baz: The Baz member. |
| * |
| * Here, the member description may contain several paragraphs. |
| */ |
| int baz; |
| union { |
| /** @foobar: Single line description. */ |
| int foobar; |
| }; |
| /** @bar2: Description for struct @bar2 inside @foo */ |
| struct { |
| /** |
| * @bar2.barbar: Description for @barbar inside @foo.bar2 |
| */ |
| int barbar; |
| } bar2; |
| }; |
| |
| Typedef documentation |
| --------------------- |
| |
| The general format of a typedef kernel-doc comment is:: |
| |
| /** |
| * typedef type_name - Brief description. |
| * |
| * Description of the type. |
| */ |
| |
| Typedefs with function prototypes can also be documented:: |
| |
| /** |
| * typedef type_name - Brief description. |
| * @arg1: description of arg1 |
| * @arg2: description of arg2 |
| * |
| * Description of the type. |
| * |
| * Context: Locking context. |
| * Return: Meaning of the return value. |
| */ |
| typedef void (*type_name)(struct v4l2_ctrl *arg1, void *arg2); |
| |
| Highlights and cross-references |
| ------------------------------- |
| |
| The following special patterns are recognized in the kernel-doc comment |
| descriptive text and converted to proper reStructuredText markup and `Sphinx C |
| Domain`_ references. |
| |
| .. attention:: The below are **only** recognized within kernel-doc comments, |
| **not** within normal reStructuredText documents. |
| |
| ``funcname()`` |
| Function reference. |
| |
| ``@parameter`` |
| Name of a function parameter. (No cross-referencing, just formatting.) |
| |
| ``%CONST`` |
| Name of a constant. (No cross-referencing, just formatting.) |
| |
| ````literal```` |
| A literal block that should be handled as-is. The output will use a |
| ``monospaced font``. |
| |
| Useful if you need to use special characters that would otherwise have some |
| meaning either by kernel-doc script of by reStructuredText. |
| |
| This is particularly useful if you need to use things like ``%ph`` inside |
| a function description. |
| |
| ``$ENVVAR`` |
| Name of an environment variable. (No cross-referencing, just formatting.) |
| |
| ``&struct name`` |
| Structure reference. |
| |
| ``&enum name`` |
| Enum reference. |
| |
| ``&typedef name`` |
| Typedef reference. |
| |
| ``&struct_name->member`` or ``&struct_name.member`` |
| Structure or union member reference. The cross-reference will be to the struct |
| or union definition, not the member directly. |
| |
| ``&name`` |
| A generic type reference. Prefer using the full reference described above |
| instead. This is mostly for legacy comments. |
| |
| Cross-referencing from reStructuredText |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| To cross-reference the functions and types defined in the kernel-doc comments |
| from reStructuredText documents, please use the `Sphinx C Domain`_ |
| references. For example:: |
| |
| See function :c:func:`foo` and struct/union/enum/typedef :c:type:`bar`. |
| |
| While the type reference works with just the type name, without the |
| struct/union/enum/typedef part in front, you may want to use:: |
| |
| See :c:type:`struct foo <foo>`. |
| See :c:type:`union bar <bar>`. |
| See :c:type:`enum baz <baz>`. |
| See :c:type:`typedef meh <meh>`. |
| |
| This will produce prettier links, and is in line with how kernel-doc does the |
| cross-references. |
| |
| For further details, please refer to the `Sphinx C Domain`_ documentation. |
| |
| Overview documentation comments |
| ------------------------------- |
| |
| To facilitate having source code and comments close together, you can include |
| kernel-doc documentation blocks that are free-form comments instead of being |
| kernel-doc for functions, structures, unions, enums, or typedefs. This could be |
| used for something like a theory of operation for a driver or library code, for |
| example. |
| |
| This is done by using a ``DOC:`` section keyword with a section title. |
| |
| The general format of an overview or high-level documentation comment is:: |
| |
| /** |
| * DOC: Theory of Operation |
| * |
| * The whizbang foobar is a dilly of a gizmo. It can do whatever you |
| * want it to do, at any time. It reads your mind. Here's how it works. |
| * |
| * foo bar splat |
| * |
| * The only drawback to this gizmo is that is can sometimes damage |
| * hardware, software, or its subject(s). |
| */ |
| |
| The title following ``DOC:`` acts as a heading within the source file, but also |
| as an identifier for extracting the documentation comment. Thus, the title must |
| be unique within the file. |
| |
| Including kernel-doc comments |
| ============================= |
| |
| The documentation comments may be included in any of the reStructuredText |
| documents using a dedicated kernel-doc Sphinx directive extension. |
| |
| The kernel-doc directive is of the format:: |
| |
| .. kernel-doc:: source |
| :option: |
| |
| The *source* is the path to a source file, relative to the kernel source |
| tree. The following directive options are supported: |
| |
| export: *[source-pattern ...]* |
| Include documentation for all functions in *source* that have been exported |
| using ``EXPORT_SYMBOL`` or ``EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL`` either in *source* or in any |
| of the files specified by *source-pattern*. |
| |
| The *source-pattern* is useful when the kernel-doc comments have been placed |
| in header files, while ``EXPORT_SYMBOL`` and ``EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL`` are next to |
| the function definitions. |
| |
| Examples:: |
| |
| .. kernel-doc:: lib/bitmap.c |
| :export: |
| |
| .. kernel-doc:: include/net/mac80211.h |
| :export: net/mac80211/*.c |
| |
| internal: *[source-pattern ...]* |
| Include documentation for all functions and types in *source* that have |
| **not** been exported using ``EXPORT_SYMBOL`` or ``EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL`` either |
| in *source* or in any of the files specified by *source-pattern*. |
| |
| Example:: |
| |
| .. kernel-doc:: drivers/gpu/drm/i915/intel_audio.c |
| :internal: |
| |
| doc: *title* |
| Include documentation for the ``DOC:`` paragraph identified by *title* in |
| *source*. Spaces are allowed in *title*; do not quote the *title*. The *title* |
| is only used as an identifier for the paragraph, and is not included in the |
| output. Please make sure to have an appropriate heading in the enclosing |
| reStructuredText document. |
| |
| Example:: |
| |
| .. kernel-doc:: drivers/gpu/drm/i915/intel_audio.c |
| :doc: High Definition Audio over HDMI and Display Port |
| |
| functions: *[ function ...]* |
| Include documentation for each *function* in *source*. |
| If no *function* if specified, the documentaion for all functions |
| and types in the *source* will be included. |
| |
| Examples:: |
| |
| .. kernel-doc:: lib/bitmap.c |
| :functions: bitmap_parselist bitmap_parselist_user |
| |
| .. kernel-doc:: lib/idr.c |
| :functions: |
| |
| Without options, the kernel-doc directive includes all documentation comments |
| from the source file. |
| |
| The kernel-doc extension is included in the kernel source tree, at |
| ``Documentation/sphinx/kerneldoc.py``. Internally, it uses the |
| ``scripts/kernel-doc`` script to extract the documentation comments from the |
| source. |
| |
| .. _kernel_doc: |
| |
| How to use kernel-doc to generate man pages |
| ------------------------------------------- |
| |
| If you just want to use kernel-doc to generate man pages you can do this |
| from the kernel git tree:: |
| |
| $ scripts/kernel-doc -man $(git grep -l '/\*\*' -- :^Documentation :^tools) | scripts/split-man.pl /tmp/man |