On Sat, Oct 12, 2019 at 12:15:42PM +0200, Stefan Wahren wrote: > Hi, > > Am 03.10.19 um 18:36 schrieb Will Deacon: > > On Wed, Oct 02, 2019 at 01:39:40PM -0700, Linus Torvalds wrote: > >> On Wed, Oct 2, 2019 at 5:56 AM Geert Uytterhoeven <geert@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > >>>> Then use the C preprocessor to force the inlining. I'm sorry it's not > >>>> as pretty as static inline functions. > >>> Which makes us lose the baby^H^H^H^Htype checking performed > >>> on function parameters, requiring to add more ugly checks. > >> I'm 100% agreed on this. > >> > >> If the inline change is being pushed by people who say "you should > >> have used macros instead if you wanted inlining", then I will just > >> revert that stupid commit that is causing problems. > >> > >> No, the preprocessor is not the answer. > >> > >> That said, code that relies on inlining for _correctness_ should use > >> "__always_inline" and possibly even have a comment about why. > >> > >> But I am considering just undoing commit 9012d011660e ("compiler: > >> allow all arches to enable CONFIG_OPTIMIZE_INLINING") entirely. The > >> advantages are questionable, and when the advantages are balanced > >> against actual regressions and the arguments are "use macros", that > >> just shows how badly thought out this was. > > It's clear that opinions are divided on this issue, but you can add > > an enthusiastic: > > > > Acked-by: Will Deacon <will@xxxxxxxxxx> > > > > if you go ahead with the revert. I'm all for allowing the compiler to > > make its own inlining decisions, but not when the potential for > > miscompilation isn't fully understood and the proposed alternatives turn > > the source into an unreadable mess. Perhaps we can do something different > > for 5.5 (arch opt-in? clang only? invert the logic? work to move functions > > over to __always_inline /before/ flipping the CONFIG option? ...?) > > what's the status on this? > > In need to prepare my pull requests for 5.5 and all recent kernelci > targets (including linux-next) with bcm2835_defconfig are still broken. I merged the patches late on Thursday, it may have been too late for linux-next to pick them up - and because of the time difference between UK and Australia, it means they won't be in linux-next until next week (basically, tomorrow). linux-next is basically a Sunday to Thursday operation from my point of view. -- RMK's Patch system: https://www.armlinux.org.uk/developer/patches/ FTTC broadband for 0.8mile line in suburbia: sync at 12.1Mbps down 622kbps up According to speedtest.net: 11.9Mbps down 500kbps up