On Mon, Jul 24, 2023, at 20:00, Alexei Starovoitov wrote: > On Sun, Jul 23, 2023 at 11:32 AM Arnd Bergmann <arnd@xxxxxxxx> wrote: >> >> >> If so, why can't we improve the compiler ? >> > >> > Agree. >> > Sounds like a compiler bug. >> >> I don't know what you might want to change in the compiler >> to avoid this. Compilers are free to decide which functions to >> inline in the absence of noinline or always_inline flags. > > Clearly a compiler bug. > Compilers should not produce false positive warnings regardless > how inlining went and optimizations performed. That would be a nice idea, but until we force everyone to migrate to clang, that's not something in our power. gcc is well known to throw tons of warnings that depend on inlining: -Wnull-dereference, -Wmaybe-uninitialized, -Wdiv-by-zero and other inherently depend on how much gcc can infer from inlining and dead code elimination. In this case, it doesn't even require a lot of imagination, the code is literally written as undefined behavior when the first call is inlined and the second one is not, I don't see what one would do in gcc to /not/ warn about passing an uninitialized register into a function call, other than moving the warning before inlining and DCE as clang does. >> One difference between gcc and clang is that gcc tries to >> be smart about warnings by using information from inlining >> to produce better warnings, while clang never uses information >> across function boundaries for generated warnings, so it won't >> find this one, but also would ignore an unconditional use >> of the uninitialized variable. >> >> >> If we have to change the kernel, what about the change below? >> > >> > To workaround the compiler bug we can simply init flag=0 to silence >> > the warn, but even that is silly. Passing flag=0 into irqrestore is buggy. >> >> Maybe inc_active() could return the flags instead of modifying >> the stack variable? that would also result in slightly better >> code when it's not inlined. > > Which gcc are we talking about here that is so buggy? I think I only tried versions 8 through 13 for this one, but can check others as well. Arnd