Re: [PATCH v2] x86: fix early boot crash on gcc-10
From: Jakub Jelinek
Date: Fri Apr 17 2020 - 04:59:17 EST
On Fri, Apr 17, 2020 at 10:42:24AM +0200, Borislav Petkov wrote:
> On Fri, Apr 17, 2020 at 10:07:26AM +0200, Jakub Jelinek wrote:
> > If you want minimal changes, you can as I said earlier either
> > mark cpu_startup_entry noreturn (in the declaration in some header so that
> > smpboot.c sees it), or you could add something after the cpu_startup_entry
> > call to ensure it is not tail call optimized (e.g. just
> > /* Prevent tail call to cpu_startup_entry because the stack
> > protector guard has been changed in the middle of this function
> > and must not be checked before tail calling another function. */
> > asm ("");
>
> That sounds ok-ish to me too.
>
> I know you probably can't tell the future :) but what stops gcc from
> doing the tail-call optimization in the future?
>
> Or are optimization decisions behind an inline asm a no-no and will
> pretty much always stay that way?
GCC intentionally treats asm as a black box, the only thing which it does
with it is: non-volatile asm (but asm without outputs is implicitly
volatile) can be CSEd, and if the compiler needs to estimate size, it
uses some heuristics by counting ; and newlines.
And it will stay this way.
> And I hope the clang folks don't come around and say, err, nope, we're
> much more aggressive here.
Unlike GCC, I think clang uses the builtin assembler to parse the string,
but don't know if it still treats the asms more like black boxes or not.
Certainly there is a lot of code in the wild that uses inline asm
as optimization barriers, so if it doesn't, then it would cause a lot of
problems.
Or go with the for (;;);, I don't think any compiler optimizes those away;
GCC 10 for C++ can optimize away infinite loops that have some conditional
exit because the language guarantees forward progress, but the C language
rules are different and for unconditional infinite loops GCC doesn't
optimize them away even if explicitly asked to -ffinite-loops.
Jakub