Re: [PATCH] hwmon: (smsc47m1) fix outside array bounds warnings

From: Guenter Roeck
Date: Mon May 27 2019 - 21:27:43 EST


On 5/22/19 8:08 AM, Jean Delvare wrote:
Hi Masahiro,

On Tue, 21 May 2019 13:44:56 +0900, Masahiro Yamada wrote:
Kbuild test robot reports outside array bounds warnings:

CC [M] drivers/hwmon/smsc47m1.o
drivers/hwmon/smsc47m1.c: In function 'fan_div_store':
drivers/hwmon/smsc47m1.c:370:49: warning: array subscript [0, 2] is outside array bounds of 'u8[3]' {aka 'unsigned char[3]'} [-Warray-bounds]
tmp = 192 - (old_div * (192 - data->fan_preload[nr])
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~^~~~
drivers/hwmon/smsc47m1.c:372:19: warning: array subscript [0, 2] is outside array bounds of 'u8[3]' {aka 'unsigned char[3]'} [-Warray-bounds]
data->fan_preload[nr] = clamp_val(tmp, 0, 191);
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~^~~~
drivers/hwmon/smsc47m1.c:373:53: warning: array subscript [0, 2] is outside array bounds of 'const u8[3]' {aka 'const unsigned char[3]'} [-Warray-bounds]
smsc47m1_write_value(data, SMSC47M1_REG_FAN_PRELOAD[nr],
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~^~~~

These messages are pretty confusing. Subscript [0, 2] would refer to a
bi-dimensional array, while these are 1-dimension arrays. If [0, 2]
means something else, I still don't get it, because both indexes 0 and
2 are perfectly within bounds of a 3-element array. So what do these
messages mean exactly? Looks like a bogus checker to me.

The index field in the SENSOR_DEVICE_ATTR_R* defines is 0, 1, or 2.
However, the compiler never knows the fact that the default in the
switch statement is unreachable.

Reported-by: kbuild test robot <lkp@xxxxxxxxx>
Signed-off-by: Masahiro Yamada <yamada.masahiro@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
---

drivers/hwmon/smsc47m1.c | 4 ++++
1 file changed, 4 insertions(+)

diff --git a/drivers/hwmon/smsc47m1.c b/drivers/hwmon/smsc47m1.c
index 5f92eab24c62..e00102e05666 100644
--- a/drivers/hwmon/smsc47m1.c
+++ b/drivers/hwmon/smsc47m1.c
@@ -364,6 +364,10 @@ static ssize_t fan_div_store(struct device *dev,
tmp |= data->fan_div[2] << 4;
smsc47m1_write_value(data, SMSC47M2_REG_FANDIV3, tmp);
break;
+ default:
+ WARN_ON(1);
+ mutex_unlock(&data->update_lock);
+ return -EINVAL;
}

So basically the code is fine, the checker (which checker, BTW?)
incorrectly thinks it isn't, and you propose to add dead code to make
the checker happy?

I disagree with this approach. Ideally the checker must be improved to

Me too. I understand and accept that we sometimes initialize variables
to make he compiler happy, but this goes a bit too far. We really should
not add dead code - it creates the impression that it can be reached,
and would live forever for no good reason.

understand that the code is correct. If that's not possible, we should
be allowed to annotate the code to skip that specific check on these
specific lines, because it has been inspected by a knowledgeable human
and confirmed to be correct.

Agreed.

And if that it still not "possible", then the least intrusive fix would > be to make one of the valid cases the default. But adding new code
which will never be executed, but must still be compiled and stored,
no, thank you. Another code checker could legitimately complain about
that actually.

IMHO if code checkers return false positives then they are not helping
us and should not be used in the first place.

Checkers are always only providing guidelines and should never be taken
at face value.

In summary - NACK.

Guenter