On Sat, Dec 29, 2018 at 3:25 PM Geert Uytterhoeven <geert@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > On Fri, Aug 24, 2018 at 12:00 AM Joe Perches <joe@xxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > On Thu, 2018-08-23 at 23:52 +0200, Geert Uytterhoeven wrote: > > > Reverted locally (incl. the follow-up), applied Andrew's fix, detected new > > > warnings in v4.18+, and sent patches where it makes sense... > > > > Thanks for that. > > Given the rise of anonymous unions all over the place, I gave up, and > have upgraded from gcc 4.1.2 to 7.3.0 for cross-compiling m68k kernels. > One good things is that the kernel size for an atari_defconfig kernel dropped > by 3.7% or 163 KiB. > > For the record, below is a list of differences in generated warnings. > Note that the source trees are not identical, as the tree used with > gcc-7.3.0 did not include any workarounds I needed for gcc-4.1.2. > All warnings flagged by gcc 4.1.2 should be false positives (iff I did a > good job during the last few years ;-) > > I plan to repeat the exercise with gcc-8.2.0 (after v4.21-rc1 or so). As promised, gcc-7.3.0 => gcc-8.2.0: *** ERRORS *** 4 error regressions: + error: devfreq.c: undefined reference to `strcmp': => .text+0x9c6) + error: ldm.c: undefined reference to `strcmp': => .text+0x1900), .text+0x1964), .text+0x19a0), .text+0x193c) + error: proc.c: undefined reference to `strcmp': => .text+0x18c), .text+0x178) + error: xattr.c: undefined reference to `strcmp': => .text+0xbaa), .text+0xbf0), .text+0x2e8), .text+0x268), .text+0x97a), .text+0x9be), .text+0x3d4) Hmm, time to fix the auto-strncmp-to-strcmp-conversion for good... *** WARNINGS *** 1 warning regressions: + drivers/dio/dio.c: warning: ‘strcpy’ writing 69 or more bytes into a region of size 64 overflows the destination [-Wstringop-overflow=]: => 240:17 That's a nice one, it found a 15 year old bug. Patch sent ;-) Gr{oetje,eeting}s, Geert -- Geert Uytterhoeven -- There's lots of Linux beyond ia32 -- geert@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx In personal conversations with technical people, I call myself a hacker. But when I'm talking to journalists I just say "programmer" or something like that. -- Linus Torvalds