Re: Build failure with v4.9-rc1 and GCC trunk -- compiler weirdness
From: Gregory CLEMENT
Date: Wed Oct 19 2016 - 11:33:12 EST
Hi Arnd,
On mer., oct. 19 2016, Arnd Bergmann <arnd@xxxxxxxx> wrote:
> On Wednesday, October 19, 2016 4:01:58 PM CEST Ard Biesheuvel wrote:
>> On 19 October 2016 at 15:59, Ard Biesheuvel <ard.biesheuvel@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
>> > On 19 October 2016 at 14:35, Will Deacon <will.deacon@xxxxxxx> wrote:
>> >> On Mon, Oct 17, 2016 at 08:43:19PM +0100, Ard Biesheuvel wrote:
>> >>> On 17 October 2016 at 19:38, Will Deacon <will.deacon@xxxxxxx> wrote:
>> >
>> > Yes, and that would be perfectly legal from a correctness point of
>> > view, and would likely help performance as well. By using
>> > __builtin_constant_p(), you are choosing to perform a build time
>> > evaluation of an expression that would ordinarily be evaluated only at
>> > runtime. This implies that you have to address undefined behavior at
>> > build time rather than at runtime as well.
>> >
>> >>> If order_base_2() is not defined for input 0, it should BUG() in that
>> >>> case, and the associated __builtin_unreachable() should prevent the
>> >>> special version from being emitted. If order_base_2() is defined for input
>> >>> 0, it should not invoke ilog2() with that argument, and the problem should
>> >>> go away as well.
>> >>
>> >> I don't necessarily think it should BUG() if it's not defined for input
>> >> 0; things like __ffs don't do that and we'd be introducing conditional
>> >> checks for cases that should not happen. The comment above order_base_2
>> >> does suggest that ob2(0) should return 0, but it can actually end up
>> >> invoking ilog2(-1), which is obviously wrong.
>> >>
>> >> I could update the comment, but that doesn't fix the build issue.
>> >>
>> >
>> > Fixing roundup_pow_of_two() [which is arguably incorrect]
>>
>> I just spotted the comment that says it is undefined. But that means
>> it could legally return 1 for input 0, i suppose
>
> I think having the link error in roundup_pow_of_two() is safer than
> returning 1.
>
> Why not turn it into a runtime warning in this driver?
>
> diff --git a/drivers/clk/mvebu/armada-37xx-periph.c b/drivers/clk/mvebu/armada-37xx-periph.c
> index cecb0fdfaef6..711d1d9842cc 100644
> --- a/drivers/clk/mvebu/armada-37xx-periph.c
> +++ b/drivers/clk/mvebu/armada-37xx-periph.c
> @@ -349,8 +349,10 @@ static int armada_3700_add_composite_clk(const struct clk_periph_data *data,
> rate->reg = reg + (u64)rate->reg;
> for (clkt = rate->table; clkt->div; clkt++)
> table_size++;
> - rate->width = order_base_2(table_size);
> - rate->lock = lock;
> + if (!WARN_ON(table_size == 0)) {
> + rate->width = order_base_2(table_size);
> + rate->lock = lock;
> + }
With the way the data are constructed in the driver I don't see how the
table_size can be 0.
However I understand it is more something for the compiler.
In this case it is better to nullify the rate_hw as having width=0 will
lead to trouble in the clk_divider operations
If it is the needed solution for this build error I can submit this kind
of patch:
diff --git a/drivers/clk/mvebu/armada-37xx-periph.c b/drivers/clk/mvebu/armada-37xx-periph.c
index 45905fc0d75b..dbc49359406d 100644
--- a/drivers/clk/mvebu/armada-37xx-periph.c
+++ b/drivers/clk/mvebu/armada-37xx-periph.c
@@ -345,11 +345,16 @@ static int armada_3700_add_composite_clk(const struct clk_periph_data *data,
const struct clk_div_table *clkt;
int table_size = 0;
- rate->reg = reg + (u64)rate->reg;
for (clkt = rate->table; clkt->div; clkt++)
table_size++;
- rate->width = order_base_2(table_size);
- rate->lock = lock;
+ if (!WARN_ON(table_size == 0)) {
+ rate->reg = reg + (u64)rate->reg;
+ rate->width = order_base_2(table_size);
+ rate->lock = lock;
+ } else {
+ rate_hw = NULL;
+ rate_ops = NULL;
+ }
}
}
Gregory
> }
> }
>
>
>
> Arnd
>
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--
Gregory Clement, Free Electrons
Kernel, drivers, real-time and embedded Linux
development, consulting, training and support.
http://free-electrons.com