Re: GCC fails to spot uninitialized variable

From: Nathan Chancellor
Date: Fri Jul 15 2022 - 18:10:28 EST


On Fri, Jul 15, 2022 at 11:09:17PM +0300, Petko Manolov wrote:
> Guys,
>
> Today i was bitten by a stupid bug that i introduced myself while writing some
> v4l2 code. Looking at it a bit more carefully i was surprised that GCC didn't
> catch this one, as it was something that should definitely emit a warning.
>
> When included into the driver, this particular code:
>
> int blah(int a, int *b)
> {
> int ret;
>
> switch (a) {
> case 0:
> ret = a;
> break;
> case 1:
> ret = *b;
> break;
> case 2:
> *b = a;
> break;
> default:
> ret = 0;
> }
>
> return ret;
> }
>
> somehow managed to defeat GCC checks. Compiling it as a standalone .c file
> with:
>
> gcc -Wall -O2 -c t.c
>
> gives me nice:
>
> t.c:19:16: warning: 'ret' may be used uninitialized in this function [-Wmaybe-uninitialized]
> 19 | return ret;
> | ^~~
>
> Any idea what might have gone wrong?

See commit 78a5255ffb6a ("Stop the ad-hoc games with
-Wno-maybe-initialized") in 5.7, which disabled that warning for a
default kernel build. You have to either include 'W=2' (which will
introduce other warnings which might be noisy) or
'KCFLAGS=-Wmaybe-uninitialized' (which will just add that warning) in
your make command to see those warnings.

As an aside, your mailer adds a "Mail-Followup-To:" header that was set
to LKML, meaning that you would not have seen this reply unless you were
subscribed to LKML. Might be something worth looking into.

Cheers,
Nathan