On Tue, Sep 25, 2018 at 2:13 PM Alexander Lochmann <alexander.lochmann@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > > > Am 25.09.2018 um 14:06 schrieb Arnd Bergmann: > > On Tue, Sep 25, 2018 at 1:35 PM Alexander Lochmann > > <alexander.lochmann@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > >> > >> Hi Arnd, > >> > >> I recently tried to disable the BUG macros on x86-32. I disabled the > >> config item in 'General Setup -> Configure standard kernel features > >> (expert users) -> BUG() support'. > >> However, BUG/BUG_ON is still defined. In the !CONFIG_BUG branch in > >> include/asm-generic/bug.h (line 181) the code checks for the existence > >> of architecture-specific variants of those macros. > >> Since x86 defines its own version of BUG(), line 182 is *not* used. > >> In the following, the x86 variant of BUG() is then used to define the > >> BUG_ON() macro. > >> > >> I propose a patch that really disables both macros if the developer > >> wants it. > >> It undefines the respective x86 variants, and defines both macros as > >> 'empty' macros. > > > > Maybe we should update the documentation instead. Note that the > > generic version is using 'while (1)' rather than 'while (0)', so this is > > not an empty macro but rather one that does more than the > > arch-specific one-instruction version does. > > > > We don't really want an empty macro any more, this was used in > > the past, but causes compile-time warnings and undefined behavior > > for no good reason > I see. So the documentation of the CONFIG_BUG option is wrong? > It currently states that 'Disabling this option eliminates support for > BUG and WARN'. > Is the current implemention (an endless loop) desired behavior? I think it's the most reasonable implementation, otherwise a function like int something(void) { if (x) return 0; else BUG(); } will return an uninitialized value. The arch specific implementations usually just contain a trapping instruction. With CONFIG_BUG() you get a nice console output that indicates where this happened, but without CONFIG_BUG(), this is just reported as an invalid instruction (if CONFIG_PRINTK is still enabled), killing the current process. Arnd