On Mon, Aug 17, 2020 at 11:08:54AM +0200, David Sterba wrote: > On Sat, Aug 15, 2020 at 10:09:24AM -0700, Kees Cook wrote: > > +static inline bool __must_check __must_check_overflow(bool overflow) > > +{ > > + return unlikely(overflow); > > How does the 'unlikely' hint propagate through return? It is in a static > inline so compiler has complete information in order to use it, but I'm > curious if it actually does. It may not -- it depends on how the compiler decides to deal with it. :) > In case the hint gets dropped, the fix would probably be > > #define check_add_overflow(a, b, d) unlikely(__must_check_overflow(({ \ > typeof(a) __a = (a); \ > typeof(b) __b = (b); \ > typeof(d) __d = (d); \ > (void) (&__a == &__b); \ > (void) (&__a == __d); \ > __builtin_add_overflow(__a, __b, __d); \ > }))) Unfortunately not, as the unlikely() ends up eating the __must_check attribute. :( -- Kees Cook