On Tue, Dec 01, 2015 at 11:49:29AM -0500, Steven Rostedt wrote: > On Tue, 1 Dec 2015 16:19:44 +0000 > Russell King - ARM Linux <linux@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > > They hardly "do nothing", as the (eg) recordmcount plasters the build > > log with warnings. A solution to that would be to make recordmcount > > silent if the section is already present. > > Note, that warning found plenty of bugs when modifications of the build > system was being done and broke recordmcount.c. I really don't want to > silent it. > > But for some reason, your build is causing lots of warnings and not for > others. Perhaps we can add a "SILENT_RECORDMCOUNT" environment variable > and have it set when something like CCACHE_HARDLINK or whatever is > causing it to trigger when we don't care. The case is: Build 1 runs with CCACHE_HARDLINK enabled. - Each object ccache creates will be stored in ccache, and hard linked into the throw-away object tree. - recordmcount modifies in-place the object in the object tree, which also modifies the object in the ccache repository. The throw-away object tree is thrown away, and a new tree is created, and the build re-run. It doesn't matter what CCACHE options are used, the effect will now be the same: - Each "hit" ccache object from the previous build will be linked or copied to the new throw-away object tree. - recordmcount will be re-run on the object, which now contains the results of the previous recordmcount in-place modification. This causes recordmcount to issue a warning. There's two solutions to this: one is to disable CCACHE_HARDLINK for all kernel builds which use in-place object modification. The other solution is to avoid in-place object modification, instead doing a read-write-rename. I think I ought to ask another question though, before we decide what to do. With recordmcount doing in-place object modification, what happens if a SIGINT or similar is received half way through the modification of an object? I would hope that make would delete the object and not leave it around. Another suggestion - maybe recordmcount, which fstat()s the file, should check the st_nlink before modifying the file, and error out with a helpful error message telling people not to use hardlinks, which would stop nasty surprises (and make it a rule that this should be implemented as a general principle for good build behaviour) - iow, something like this (untested): scripts/recordmcount.c | 4 ++++ 1 file changed, 4 insertions(+) diff --git a/scripts/recordmcount.c b/scripts/recordmcount.c index 698768bdc581..bb7589fd7392 100644 --- a/scripts/recordmcount.c +++ b/scripts/recordmcount.c @@ -203,6 +203,10 @@ static void *mmap_file(char const *fname) fprintf(stderr, "not a regular file: %s\n", fname); fail_file(); } + if (sb.st_nlink != 1) { + fprintf(stderr, "file is hard linked: %s\n", fname); + fail_file(); + } addr = mmap(0, sb.st_size, PROT_READ|PROT_WRITE, MAP_PRIVATE, fd_map, 0); mmap_failed = 0; -- FTTC broadband for 0.8mile line: currently at 9.6Mbps down 400kbps up according to speedtest.net. -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-arm-msm" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html