tracing: Use appropriate perl constructs in recordmcount.pl

Modified recordmcount.pl to use perl constructs that are still
understandable by C hackers that are not perl programmers.

Signed-off-by: Wolfram Sang <w.sang@pengutronix.de>
LKML-Reference: <1262724082-9517-1-git-send-email-w.sang@pengutronix.de>
Signed-off-by: Steven Rostedt <rostedt@goodmis.org>
This commit is contained in:
Wolfram Sang 2010-01-05 21:41:22 +01:00 committed by Steven Rostedt
parent dc4f8845ee
commit dfaa9e2c57

View File

@ -136,13 +136,14 @@ my %text_sections = (
".text.unlikely" => 1,
);
$objdump = "objdump" if ((length $objdump) == 0);
$objcopy = "objcopy" if ((length $objcopy) == 0);
$cc = "gcc" if ((length $cc) == 0);
$ld = "ld" if ((length $ld) == 0);
$nm = "nm" if ((length $nm) == 0);
$rm = "rm" if ((length $rm) == 0);
$mv = "mv" if ((length $mv) == 0);
# Note: we are nice to C-programmers here, thus we skip the '||='-idiom.
$objdump = 'objdump' if (!$objdump);
$objcopy = 'objcopy' if (!$objcopy);
$cc = 'gcc' if (!$cc);
$ld = 'ld' if (!$ld);
$nm = 'nm' if (!$nm);
$rm = 'rm' if (!$rm);
$mv = 'mv' if (!$mv);
#print STDERR "running: $P '$arch' '$objdump' '$objcopy' '$cc' '$ld' " .
# "'$nm' '$rm' '$mv' '$inputfile'\n";
@ -194,12 +195,8 @@ sub check_objcopy
}
}
if ($arch eq "x86") {
if ($bits == 64) {
$arch = "x86_64";
} else {
$arch = "i386";
}
if ($arch eq 'x86') {
$arch = ($bits == 64) ? 'x86_64' : 'i386';
}
#
@ -476,11 +473,7 @@ while (<IN>) {
$read_headers = 0;
# Only record text sections that we know are safe
if (defined($text_sections{$1})) {
$read_function = 1;
} else {
$read_function = 0;
}
$read_function = defined($text_sections{$1});
# print out any recorded offsets
update_funcs();