RE: outside array bounds error on ppc64_defconfig, GCC 12.1.0

From: David Laight
Date: Tue Jun 07 2022 - 10:23:43 EST


From: Michael Ellerman
> Sent: 07 June 2022 03:05
>
> Bagas Sanjaya <bagasdotme@xxxxxxxxx> writes:
> > Hi,
> >
> > I'm trying to verify Drop ppc_inst_as_str() patch on [1] by performing
> > ppc64_defconfig build with powerpc64-unknown-linux-gnu-gcc (GCC 12.1.0).
> > The patch is applied on top of powerpc tree, next branch.
>
> Yeah I see it too.
>
> > I got outside array bounds error:
> >
> > CC arch/powerpc/kernel/dbell.o
> > In function 'do_byte_reverse',
> > inlined from 'do_vec_store' at arch/powerpc/lib/sstep.c:722:3,
> > inlined from 'emulate_loadstore' at arch/powerpc/lib/sstep.c:3509:9:
> > arch/powerpc/lib/sstep.c:286:25: error: array subscript [3, 4] is outside array bounds of 'union
> <anonymous>[1]' [-Werror=array-bounds]
> > 286 | up[0] = byterev_8(up[3]);
> > | ^~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
> >
> > arch/owerpc/lib/sstep.c: In function 'emulate_loadstore':
> > arch/powerpc/lib/sstep.c:708:11: note: at offset [24, 39] into object 'u' of size 16
> > 708 | } u;
> > | ^
> > In function 'do_byte_reverse',
> > inlined from 'do_vec_store' at arch/powerpc/lib/sstep.c:722:3,
> > inlined from 'emulate_loadstore' at arch/powerpc/lib/sstep.c:3509:9:
> > arch/powerpc/lib/sstep.c:287:23: error: array subscript [3, 4] is outside array bounds of 'union
> <anonymous>[1]' [-Werror=array-bounds]
> > 287 | up[3] = tmp;
> > | ~~~~~~^~~~~
>
> This happens because we have a generic byte reverse function
> (do_byte_reverse()), that takes a size as a parameter. So it will
> reverse 8, 16, 32 bytes etc.
>
> In some cases the compiler can see that we're passing a pointer to
> storage that is smaller than 32 bytes, but it isn't convinced that the
> size parameter is also smaller than 32 bytes.
>
> Which I think is reasonable, the code that sets the size is separate
> from this code, so the compiler can't really deduce that it's safe.
>
> I don't see a really simple fix. I tried clamping the size parameter to
> do_byte_reverse() with max(), but that didn't work :/

I had a quick look at the code - it is somewhat horrid!
Not really surprising the compiler is confused.
Although it shouldn't be outputting that error message
unless it is certain.

Could it be re-written to read the data into an __u128
(or whatever the compiler type is).
Optionally byteswap the entire thing (swap the words and
then byteswap each word).
The do a put_user_8/16/32/64() to write out the value.

I think that would remove all the memory accesses and make
it a lot faster as well.

David

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