Re: [kbuild] [djwong-xfs:djwong-wtf 349/351] fs/xfs/xfs_bmap_util.c:1372 xfs_map_free_extent() warn: missing error code 'error'

From: Darrick J. Wong
Date: Tue Mar 22 2022 - 12:38:41 EST


On Tue, Mar 22, 2022 at 08:47:26AM +0300, Dan Carpenter wrote:
> On Mon, Mar 21, 2022 at 02:59:08PM -0700, Darrick J. Wong wrote:
> > On Mon, Mar 21, 2022 at 10:33:02AM +0300, Dan Carpenter wrote:
> > > b82670045aab66 Darrick J. Wong 2022-01-06 1365
> > > b82670045aab66 Darrick J. Wong 2022-01-06 1366 error = xfs_alloc_find_freesp(tp, pag, cursor, end_agbno, &len);
> > > b82670045aab66 Darrick J. Wong 2022-01-06 1367 if (error)
> > > b82670045aab66 Darrick J. Wong 2022-01-06 1368 goto out_cancel;
> > > b82670045aab66 Darrick J. Wong 2022-01-06 1369
> > > b82670045aab66 Darrick J. Wong 2022-01-06 1370 /* Bail out if the cursor is beyond what we asked for. */
> > > b82670045aab66 Darrick J. Wong 2022-01-06 1371 if (*cursor >= end_agbno)
> > > b82670045aab66 Darrick J. Wong 2022-01-06 @1372 goto out_cancel;
> > >
> > > This looks like it should have an error = -EINVAL;
> >
> > Nope. If xfs_alloc_find_freesp moves @cursor goes beyond end_agbno, we
> > want to exit early so that the xfs_map_free_extent caller will return to
> > userspace.
> >
> > --D
>
> I'm generally pretty happy with this static checker rule. Returning
> success on a failure path almost always results if something bad like a
> NULL deref or a use after free. But false positives are a real risk
> because it's tempting to add an error code to this and introduce a bug.
>
> Smatch will not print the warning if error is set within 4 lines of the
> goto.
> error = 0;
> if (*cursor >= end_agbno)
> goto out_cancel;

The trouble is, if I do that:

error = xfs_alloc_find_freesp(...);
if (error)
goto out_cancel;

error = 0;
if (*cursor >= end_agbno)
goto out_cancel;

then I'll get patch reviewers and/or tools complaining about setting
error to zero unnecessarily. Either way we end up with a lot of code
golf for something the compiler will probably remove for us.

Question: Can sparse detect that the if() test involves a comparison
between a non-pointer function argument and a dereferenced pointer
argument? Would that be sufficient to detect functions that advance a
cursor passed in by the caller and return early when the cursor moves
outside of a range also specified by the caller?

--D

> Another option is that people have started adding comments to these
> blocks in response to the checker warning.
>
> Or if you had a different idea about how to silence the checker warning
> I can also probably implement that.
>
> regards,
> dan carpenter
>
>