Re: [PATCH] video: limit stack usage of ir-kbd-i2c.c
From: Marcin Slusarz
Date: Wed Feb 27 2008 - 05:25:09 EST
On Tue, Feb 26, 2008 at 11:23:20PM +0100, Jean Delvare wrote:
> Hi Marcin,
Hi
> On Tue, 26 Feb 2008 22:03:16 +0100, Marcin Slusarz wrote:
> > Do you have an idea (or patch :D) how to solve this:
> > 0x00000234 v4l_compat_translate_ioctl [v4l1-compat]: 1376
> > ? That's on top of my make checkstack output
>
> Random ideas (but I am in no way a specialist of this exercise):
>
> * You could try moving the structures to the blocks where they are used,
> in the case a given structure is used for only one ioctl. I'm not too
> sure how gcc handles local variables declared inside blocks with
> regards to stack reservation though. I thought it would work but my
> experiments today seem to suggest it doesn't.
That won't work. Variables at beginning of function take only ~600 bytes,
so the rest must be from inner blocks and inlines (probably).
> * You can move the handling of some ioctls to dedicated functions, just
> like I did in i2c-dev:
> http://lists.lm-sensors.org/pipermail/i2c/2008-February/003010.html
> However there is a risk that gcc will inline these functions (that's
> what happened to me...) Not sure how to prevent gcc from inlining.
There's "noinline" attribute in linux/compiler.h (compiler-gcc.h actually)
for these situations.
> * You can allocate the structures dynamically, as you originally wanted
> to do for ir-kbd-i2c. However this has a performance penalty and will
> fragment the memory, so it's not ideal.
>
> * If each ioctl uses only one of the structures, you may define a union
> of all the structures. The size of the union will be the size of the
> biggest structure, so you save a lot of space on the stack.
Nice idea.
I'll try 2nd and 4th approaches.
Marcin Slusarz
--
To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-kernel" in
the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html
Please read the FAQ at http://www.tux.org/lkml/