On Wed, May 17, 2023 at 05:07:55PM +0800, Stephen Zhang wrote:
Qu Wenruo <quwenruo.btrfs@xxxxxxx> 于2023年5月17日周三 15:47写道:
On 2023/5/16 09:34, zhangshida wrote:
From: Shida Zhang <zhangshida@xxxxxxxxxx>
This fixes the following warning reported by gcc 10 under x86_64:
Full gcc version please.
it's "gcc (Debian 10.2.1-6) 10.2.1 20210110".
Especially you need to check if your gcc10 is the latest release.
If newer gcc (12.2.1) tested without such error, it may very possible to
be a false alert.
And in fact it is.
@first_dir_index would only be assigned to @last_range_start if
last_range_end != 0.
Thus the loop must have to be executed once, and @last_range_start won't
be zero.
Yup, I know it's a false positive. What I don't know is the criterion
that decides whether it is a good patch.
If you have analyzed the code and found out that it was indeed a false
positive then please state that in the changelog. Fixing it still makes
sense so the compiler version and briefly explaining why you fix it that
way makes it a good patch.
That is,
it doesn't look so good because it is a false alert and the latest gcc
can get rid of such warnings, based on what you said( if I understand
correctly).
Or,
It looks okay because the patch can make some older gcc get a cleaner
build and do no harm to the original code logic.
In general I agree here.
In fact, I've seen Linus complaining about the warning generated by
some gcc version in another thread.
https://lore.kernel.org/linux-xfs/168384265493.22863.2683852857659893778.pr-tracker-bot@xxxxxxxxxx/T/#t
I share the POV for warning fixes, I'd rather see new reports after
fixing the previous ones than reminding everybody to update.