1Writing kernel-doc comments 2=========================== 3 4The Linux kernel source files may contain structured documentation 5comments in the kernel-doc format to describe the functions, types 6and design of the code. It is easier to keep documentation up-to-date 7when it is embedded in source files. 8 9.. note:: The kernel-doc format is deceptively similar to javadoc, 10 gtk-doc or Doxygen, yet distinctively different, for historical 11 reasons. The kernel source contains tens of thousands of kernel-doc 12 comments. Please stick to the style described here. 13 14The kernel-doc structure is extracted from the comments, and proper 15`Sphinx C Domain`_ function and type descriptions with anchors are 16generated from them. The descriptions are filtered for special kernel-doc 17highlights and cross-references. See below for details. 18 19.. _Sphinx C Domain: http://www.sphinx-doc.org/en/stable/domains.html 20 21Every function that is exported to loadable modules using 22``EXPORT_SYMBOL`` or ``EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL`` should have a kernel-doc 23comment. Functions and data structures in header files which are intended 24to be used by modules should also have kernel-doc comments. 25 26It is good practice to also provide kernel-doc formatted documentation 27for functions externally visible to other kernel files (not marked 28``static``). We also recommend providing kernel-doc formatted 29documentation for private (file ``static``) routines, for consistency of 30kernel source code layout. This is lower priority and at the discretion 31of the maintainer of that kernel source file. 32 33How to format kernel-doc comments 34--------------------------------- 35 36The opening comment mark ``/**`` is used for kernel-doc comments. The 37``kernel-doc`` tool will extract comments marked this way. The rest of 38the comment is formatted like a normal multi-line comment with a column 39of asterisks on the left side, closing with ``*/`` on a line by itself. 40 41The function and type kernel-doc comments should be placed just before 42the function or type being described in order to maximise the chance 43that somebody changing the code will also change the documentation. The 44overview kernel-doc comments may be placed anywhere at the top indentation 45level. 46 47Running the ``kernel-doc`` tool with increased verbosity and without actual 48output generation may be used to verify proper formatting of the 49documentation comments. For example:: 50 51 scripts/kernel-doc -v -none drivers/foo/bar.c 52 53The documentation format is verified by the kernel build when it is 54requested to perform extra gcc checks:: 55 56 make W=n 57 58Function documentation 59---------------------- 60 61The general format of a function and function-like macro kernel-doc comment is:: 62 63 /** 64 * function_name() - Brief description of function. 65 * @arg1: Describe the first argument. 66 * @arg2: Describe the second argument. 67 * One can provide multiple line descriptions 68 * for arguments. 69 * 70 * A longer description, with more discussion of the function function_name() 71 * that might be useful to those using or modifying it. Begins with an 72 * empty comment line, and may include additional embedded empty 73 * comment lines. 74 * 75 * The longer description may have multiple paragraphs. 76 * 77 * Context: Describes whether the function can sleep, what locks it takes, 78 * releases, or expects to be held. It can extend over multiple 79 * lines. 80 * Return: Describe the return value of function_name. 81 * 82 * The return value description can also have multiple paragraphs, and should 83 * be placed at the end of the comment block. 84 */ 85 86The brief description following the function name may span multiple lines, and 87ends with an argument description, a blank comment line, or the end of the 88comment block. 89 90Function parameters 91~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 92 93Each function argument should be described in order, immediately following 94the short function description. Do not leave a blank line between the 95function description and the arguments, nor between the arguments. 96 97Each ``@argument:`` description may span multiple lines. 98 99.. note:: 100 101 If the ``@argument`` description has multiple lines, the continuation 102 of the description should start at the same column as the previous line:: 103 104 * @argument: some long description 105 * that continues on next lines 106 107 or:: 108 109 * @argument: 110 * some long description 111 * that continues on next lines 112 113If a function has a variable number of arguments, its description should 114be written in kernel-doc notation as:: 115 116 * @...: description 117 118Function context 119~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 120 121The context in which a function can be called should be described in a 122section named ``Context``. This should include whether the function 123sleeps or can be called from interrupt context, as well as what locks 124it takes, releases and expects to be held by its caller. 125 126Examples:: 127 128 * Context: Any context. 129 * Context: Any context. Takes and releases the RCU lock. 130 * Context: Any context. Expects <lock> to be held by caller. 131 * Context: Process context. May sleep if @gfp flags permit. 132 * Context: Process context. Takes and releases <mutex>. 133 * Context: Softirq or process context. Takes and releases <lock>, BH-safe. 134 * Context: Interrupt context. 135 136Return values 137~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 138 139The return value, if any, should be described in a dedicated section 140named ``Return``. 141 142.. note:: 143 144 #) The multi-line descriptive text you provide does *not* recognize 145 line breaks, so if you try to format some text nicely, as in:: 146 147 * Return: 148 * 0 - OK 149 * -EINVAL - invalid argument 150 * -ENOMEM - out of memory 151 152 this will all run together and produce:: 153 154 Return: 0 - OK -EINVAL - invalid argument -ENOMEM - out of memory 155 156 So, in order to produce the desired line breaks, you need to use a 157 ReST list, e. g.:: 158 159 * Return: 160 * * 0 - OK to runtime suspend the device 161 * * -EBUSY - Device should not be runtime suspended 162 163 #) If the descriptive text you provide has lines that begin with 164 some phrase followed by a colon, each of those phrases will be taken 165 as a new section heading, which probably won't produce the desired 166 effect. 167 168Structure, union, and enumeration documentation 169----------------------------------------------- 170 171The general format of a struct, union, and enum kernel-doc comment is:: 172 173 /** 174 * struct struct_name - Brief description. 175 * @member1: Description of member1. 176 * @member2: Description of member2. 177 * One can provide multiple line descriptions 178 * for members. 179 * 180 * Description of the structure. 181 */ 182 183You can replace the ``struct`` in the above example with ``union`` or 184``enum`` to describe unions or enums. ``member`` is used to mean struct 185and union member names as well as enumerations in an enum. 186 187The brief description following the structure name may span multiple 188lines, and ends with a member description, a blank comment line, or the 189end of the comment block. 190 191Members 192~~~~~~~ 193 194Members of structs, unions and enums should be documented the same way 195as function parameters; they immediately succeed the short description 196and may be multi-line. 197 198Inside a struct or union description, you can use the ``private:`` and 199``public:`` comment tags. Structure fields that are inside a ``private:`` 200area are not listed in the generated output documentation. 201 202The ``private:`` and ``public:`` tags must begin immediately following a 203``/*`` comment marker. They may optionally include comments between the 204``:`` and the ending ``*/`` marker. 205 206Example:: 207 208 /** 209 * struct my_struct - short description 210 * @a: first member 211 * @b: second member 212 * @d: fourth member 213 * 214 * Longer description 215 */ 216 struct my_struct { 217 int a; 218 int b; 219 /* private: internal use only */ 220 int c; 221 /* public: the next one is public */ 222 int d; 223 }; 224 225Nested structs/unions 226~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 227 228It is possible to document nested structs and unions, like:: 229 230 /** 231 * struct nested_foobar - a struct with nested unions and structs 232 * @memb1: first member of anonymous union/anonymous struct 233 * @memb2: second member of anonymous union/anonymous struct 234 * @memb3: third member of anonymous union/anonymous struct 235 * @memb4: fourth member of anonymous union/anonymous struct 236 * @bar: non-anonymous union 237 * @bar.st1: struct st1 inside @bar 238 * @bar.st2: struct st2 inside @bar 239 * @bar.st1.memb1: first member of struct st1 on union bar 240 * @bar.st1.memb2: second member of struct st1 on union bar 241 * @bar.st2.memb1: first member of struct st2 on union bar 242 * @bar.st2.memb2: second member of struct st2 on union bar 243 */ 244 struct nested_foobar { 245 /* Anonymous union/struct*/ 246 union { 247 struct { 248 int memb1; 249 int memb2; 250 }; 251 struct { 252 void *memb3; 253 int memb4; 254 }; 255 }; 256 union { 257 struct { 258 int memb1; 259 int memb2; 260 } st1; 261 struct { 262 void *memb1; 263 int memb2; 264 } st2; 265 } bar; 266 }; 267 268.. note:: 269 270 #) When documenting nested structs or unions, if the struct/union ``foo`` 271 is named, the member ``bar`` inside it should be documented as 272 ``@foo.bar:`` 273 #) When the nested struct/union is anonymous, the member ``bar`` in it 274 should be documented as ``@bar:`` 275 276In-line member documentation comments 277~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 278 279The structure members may also be documented in-line within the definition. 280There are two styles, single-line comments where both the opening ``/**`` and 281closing ``*/`` are on the same line, and multi-line comments where they are each 282on a line of their own, like all other kernel-doc comments:: 283 284 /** 285 * struct foo - Brief description. 286 * @foo: The Foo member. 287 */ 288 struct foo { 289 int foo; 290 /** 291 * @bar: The Bar member. 292 */ 293 int bar; 294 /** 295 * @baz: The Baz member. 296 * 297 * Here, the member description may contain several paragraphs. 298 */ 299 int baz; 300 union { 301 /** @foobar: Single line description. */ 302 int foobar; 303 }; 304 /** @bar2: Description for struct @bar2 inside @foo */ 305 struct { 306 /** 307 * @bar2.barbar: Description for @barbar inside @foo.bar2 308 */ 309 int barbar; 310 } bar2; 311 }; 312 313Typedef documentation 314--------------------- 315 316The general format of a typedef kernel-doc comment is:: 317 318 /** 319 * typedef type_name - Brief description. 320 * 321 * Description of the type. 322 */ 323 324Typedefs with function prototypes can also be documented:: 325 326 /** 327 * typedef type_name - Brief description. 328 * @arg1: description of arg1 329 * @arg2: description of arg2 330 * 331 * Description of the type. 332 * 333 * Context: Locking context. 334 * Return: Meaning of the return value. 335 */ 336 typedef void (*type_name)(struct v4l2_ctrl *arg1, void *arg2); 337 338Highlights and cross-references 339------------------------------- 340 341The following special patterns are recognized in the kernel-doc comment 342descriptive text and converted to proper reStructuredText markup and `Sphinx C 343Domain`_ references. 344 345.. attention:: The below are **only** recognized within kernel-doc comments, 346 **not** within normal reStructuredText documents. 347 348``funcname()`` 349 Function reference. 350 351``@parameter`` 352 Name of a function parameter. (No cross-referencing, just formatting.) 353 354``%CONST`` 355 Name of a constant. (No cross-referencing, just formatting.) 356 357````literal```` 358 A literal block that should be handled as-is. The output will use a 359 ``monospaced font``. 360 361 Useful if you need to use special characters that would otherwise have some 362 meaning either by kernel-doc script or by reStructuredText. 363 364 This is particularly useful if you need to use things like ``%ph`` inside 365 a function description. 366 367``$ENVVAR`` 368 Name of an environment variable. (No cross-referencing, just formatting.) 369 370``&struct name`` 371 Structure reference. 372 373``&enum name`` 374 Enum reference. 375 376``&typedef name`` 377 Typedef reference. 378 379``&struct_name->member`` or ``&struct_name.member`` 380 Structure or union member reference. The cross-reference will be to the struct 381 or union definition, not the member directly. 382 383``&name`` 384 A generic type reference. Prefer using the full reference described above 385 instead. This is mostly for legacy comments. 386 387Cross-referencing from reStructuredText 388~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 389 390No additional syntax is needed to cross-reference the functions and types 391defined in the kernel-doc comments from reStructuredText documents. 392Just end function names with ``()`` and write ``struct``, ``union``, ``enum`` 393or ``typedef`` before types. 394For example:: 395 396 See foo(). 397 See struct foo. 398 See union bar. 399 See enum baz. 400 See typedef meh. 401 402However, if you want custom text in the cross-reference link, that can be done 403through the following syntax:: 404 405 See :c:func:`my custom link text for function foo <foo>`. 406 See :c:type:`my custom link text for struct bar <bar>`. 407 408For further details, please refer to the `Sphinx C Domain`_ documentation. 409 410Overview documentation comments 411------------------------------- 412 413To facilitate having source code and comments close together, you can include 414kernel-doc documentation blocks that are free-form comments instead of being 415kernel-doc for functions, structures, unions, enums, or typedefs. This could be 416used for something like a theory of operation for a driver or library code, for 417example. 418 419This is done by using a ``DOC:`` section keyword with a section title. 420 421The general format of an overview or high-level documentation comment is:: 422 423 /** 424 * DOC: Theory of Operation 425 * 426 * The whizbang foobar is a dilly of a gizmo. It can do whatever you 427 * want it to do, at any time. It reads your mind. Here's how it works. 428 * 429 * foo bar splat 430 * 431 * The only drawback to this gizmo is that is can sometimes damage 432 * hardware, software, or its subject(s). 433 */ 434 435The title following ``DOC:`` acts as a heading within the source file, but also 436as an identifier for extracting the documentation comment. Thus, the title must 437be unique within the file. 438 439Including kernel-doc comments 440============================= 441 442The documentation comments may be included in any of the reStructuredText 443documents using a dedicated kernel-doc Sphinx directive extension. 444 445The kernel-doc directive is of the format:: 446 447 .. kernel-doc:: source 448 :option: 449 450The *source* is the path to a source file, relative to the kernel source 451tree. The following directive options are supported: 452 453export: *[source-pattern ...]* 454 Include documentation for all functions in *source* that have been exported 455 using ``EXPORT_SYMBOL`` or ``EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL`` either in *source* or in any 456 of the files specified by *source-pattern*. 457 458 The *source-pattern* is useful when the kernel-doc comments have been placed 459 in header files, while ``EXPORT_SYMBOL`` and ``EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL`` are next to 460 the function definitions. 461 462 Examples:: 463 464 .. kernel-doc:: lib/bitmap.c 465 :export: 466 467 .. kernel-doc:: include/net/mac80211.h 468 :export: net/mac80211/*.c 469 470internal: *[source-pattern ...]* 471 Include documentation for all functions and types in *source* that have 472 **not** been exported using ``EXPORT_SYMBOL`` or ``EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL`` either 473 in *source* or in any of the files specified by *source-pattern*. 474 475 Example:: 476 477 .. kernel-doc:: drivers/gpu/drm/i915/intel_audio.c 478 :internal: 479 480identifiers: *[ function/type ...]* 481 Include documentation for each *function* and *type* in *source*. 482 If no *function* is specified, the documentation for all functions 483 and types in the *source* will be included. 484 485 Examples:: 486 487 .. kernel-doc:: lib/bitmap.c 488 :identifiers: bitmap_parselist bitmap_parselist_user 489 490 .. kernel-doc:: lib/idr.c 491 :identifiers: 492 493no-identifiers: *[ function/type ...]* 494 Exclude documentation for each *function* and *type* in *source*. 495 496 Example:: 497 498 .. kernel-doc:: lib/bitmap.c 499 :no-identifiers: bitmap_parselist 500 501functions: *[ function/type ...]* 502 This is an alias of the 'identifiers' directive and deprecated. 503 504doc: *title* 505 Include documentation for the ``DOC:`` paragraph identified by *title* in 506 *source*. Spaces are allowed in *title*; do not quote the *title*. The *title* 507 is only used as an identifier for the paragraph, and is not included in the 508 output. Please make sure to have an appropriate heading in the enclosing 509 reStructuredText document. 510 511 Example:: 512 513 .. kernel-doc:: drivers/gpu/drm/i915/intel_audio.c 514 :doc: High Definition Audio over HDMI and Display Port 515 516Without options, the kernel-doc directive includes all documentation comments 517from the source file. 518 519The kernel-doc extension is included in the kernel source tree, at 520``Documentation/sphinx/kerneldoc.py``. Internally, it uses the 521``scripts/kernel-doc`` script to extract the documentation comments from the 522source. 523 524.. _kernel_doc: 525 526How to use kernel-doc to generate man pages 527------------------------------------------- 528 529If you just want to use kernel-doc to generate man pages you can do this 530from the kernel git tree:: 531 532 $ scripts/kernel-doc -man \ 533 $(git grep -l '/\*\*' -- :^Documentation :^tools) \ 534 | scripts/split-man.pl /tmp/man 535 536Some older versions of git do not support some of the variants of syntax for 537path exclusion. One of the following commands may work for those versions:: 538 539 $ scripts/kernel-doc -man \ 540 $(git grep -l '/\*\*' -- . ':!Documentation' ':!tools') \ 541 | scripts/split-man.pl /tmp/man 542 543 $ scripts/kernel-doc -man \ 544 $(git grep -l '/\*\*' -- . ":(exclude)Documentation" ":(exclude)tools") \ 545 | scripts/split-man.pl /tmp/man 546