On 28/07/23 10:33, Josh Poimboeuf wrote: > On Thu, Jul 20, 2023 at 05:30:47PM +0100, Valentin Schneider wrote: >> I had to look into objtool itself to understand what this warning was >> about; make it more explicit. >> >> Signed-off-by: Valentin Schneider <vschneid@xxxxxxxxxx> >> --- >> tools/objtool/check.c | 2 +- >> 1 file changed, 1 insertion(+), 1 deletion(-) >> >> diff --git a/tools/objtool/check.c b/tools/objtool/check.c >> index 8936a05f0e5ac..d308330f2910e 100644 >> --- a/tools/objtool/check.c >> +++ b/tools/objtool/check.c >> @@ -3360,7 +3360,7 @@ static bool pv_call_dest(struct objtool_file *file, struct instruction *insn) >> >> list_for_each_entry(target, &file->pv_ops[idx].targets, pv_target) { >> if (!target->sec->noinstr) { >> - WARN("pv_ops[%d]: %s", idx, target->name); >> + WARN("pv_ops[%d]: indirect call to %s() leaves .noinstr.text section", idx, target->name); >> file->pv_ops[idx].clean = false; > > This is an improvement, though I think it still results in two warnings, > with the second not-so-useful warning happening in validate_call(). > > Ideally it would only show a single warning, I guess that would need a > little bit of restructuring the code. You're quite right - fabricating an artificial warning with a call to __flush_tlb_local(): vmlinux.o: warning: objtool: pv_ops[1]: indirect call to native_flush_tlb_local() leaves .noinstr.text section vmlinux.o: warning: objtool: __flush_tlb_all_noinstr+0x4: call to {dynamic}() leaves .noinstr.text section Interestingly the second one doesn't seem to have triggered the "pv_ops" bit of call_dest_name. Seems like any call to insn_reloc(NULL, x) will return NULL. Trickling down the file yields: vmlinux.o: warning: objtool: pv_ops[1]: indirect call to native_flush_tlb_local() leaves .noinstr.text section vmlinux.o: warning: objtool: __flush_tlb_all_noinstr+0x4: call to pv_ops[0]() leaves .noinstr.text section In my case (!PARAVIRT_XXL) pv_ops should look like: [0]: .cpu.io_delay [1]: .mmu.flush_tlb_user() so pv_ops[1] looks right. Seems like pv_call_dest() gets it right because it uses arch_dest_reloc_offset(). If I use the above to fix up validate_call(), would we still need pv_call_dest() & co? > > -- > Josh