On 2/7/22 7:33 AM, Alviro Iskandar Setiawan wrote: > On Mon, Feb 7, 2022 at 9:21 PM Dan Carpenter <dan.carpenter@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: >> On Mon, Feb 07, 2022 at 06:45:57AM -0700, Jens Axboe wrote: >>> On 2/7/22 4:43 AM, Ammar Faizi wrote: >>>> From: Alviro Iskandar Setiawan <alviro.iskandar@xxxxxxxxx> >>>> >>>> In io_recv() if import_single_range() fails, the @flags variable is >>>> uninitialized, then it will goto out_free. >>>> >>>> After the goto, the compiler doesn't know that (ret < min_ret) is >>>> always true, so it thinks the "if ((flags & MSG_WAITALL) ..." path >>>> could be taken. >>>> >>>> The complaint comes from gcc-9 (Debian 9.3.0-22) 9.3.0: >>>> ``` >>>> fs/io_uring.c:5238 io_recvfrom() error: uninitialized symbol 'flags' >>>> ``` >>>> Fix this by bypassing the @ret and @flags check when >>>> import_single_range() fails. >>> >>> The compiler should be able to deduce this, and I guess newer compilers >>> do which is why we haven't seen this warning before. > > The compiler can't deduce this because the import_single_range() is > located in a different translation unit (different C file), so it > can't prove that (ret < min_ret) is always true as it can't see the > function definition (in reality, it is always true because it only > returns either 0 or -EFAULT). Yes you are right, I forgot this is the generic helper, and not our internal one. >> No, we disabled GCC's uninitialized variable checking a couple years >> back. Linus got sick of the false positives. You can still see it if >> you enable W=2 >> >> fs/io_uring.c: In function ‘io_recv’: >> fs/io_uring.c:5252:20: warning: ‘flags’ may be used uninitialized in this function [-Wmaybe-uninitialized] >> } else if ((flags & MSG_WAITALL) && (msg.msg_flags & (MSG_TRUNC | MSG_CTRUNC))) { >> ~~~~~~~^~~~~~~~~~~~~~ >> >> If you introduce an uninitialized variable bug then likelyhood is the >> kbuild-bot will send you a Clang warning or a Smatch warning or both. >> I don't think anyone looks at GCC W=2 warnings. >> > > This warning is valid, and the compiler should really warn that. But > again, in reality, this is still a false-positive warning, because > that "else if" will never be taken from the "goto out_free" path. Right, as mentioned in my email, there is no bug there. But I do like the patch as it cleans it up too, the error-out path should not include non-cleanup items. -- Jens Axboe