On 10/07/2020 17:03, Bartosz Golaszewski wrote: > On Fri, Jul 10, 2020 at 3:46 PM Jon Hunter <jonathanh@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: >> >> Hi Bartosz, >> >> On 29/06/2020 07:50, Bartosz Golaszewski wrote: >>> From: Bartosz Golaszewski <bgolaszewski@xxxxxxxxxxxx> >>> >>> Make devm_kmalloc() behave similarly to non-managed kmalloc(): return >>> ZERO_SIZE_PTR when requested size is 0. Update devm_kfree() to handle >>> this case. >>> >>> Signed-off-by: Bartosz Golaszewski <bgolaszewski@xxxxxxxxxxxx> >>> --- >>> drivers/base/devres.c | 9 ++++++--- >>> 1 file changed, 6 insertions(+), 3 deletions(-) >>> >>> diff --git a/drivers/base/devres.c b/drivers/base/devres.c >>> index 1df1fb10b2d9..ed615d3b9cf1 100644 >>> --- a/drivers/base/devres.c >>> +++ b/drivers/base/devres.c >>> @@ -819,6 +819,9 @@ void *devm_kmalloc(struct device *dev, size_t size, gfp_t gfp) >>> { >>> struct devres *dr; >>> >>> + if (unlikely(!size)) >>> + return ZERO_SIZE_PTR; >>> + >>> /* use raw alloc_dr for kmalloc caller tracing */ >>> dr = alloc_dr(devm_kmalloc_release, size, gfp, dev_to_node(dev)); >>> if (unlikely(!dr)) >>> @@ -950,10 +953,10 @@ void devm_kfree(struct device *dev, const void *p) >>> int rc; >>> >>> /* >>> - * Special case: pointer to a string in .rodata returned by >>> - * devm_kstrdup_const(). >>> + * Special cases: pointer to a string in .rodata returned by >>> + * devm_kstrdup_const() or NULL/ZERO ptr. >>> */ >>> - if (unlikely(is_kernel_rodata((unsigned long)p))) >>> + if (unlikely(is_kernel_rodata((unsigned long)p) || ZERO_OR_NULL_PTR(p))) >>> return; >>> >>> rc = devres_destroy(dev, devm_kmalloc_release, >> >> >> This change caught a bug in one of our Tegra drivers, which I am in the >> process of fixing. Once I bisected to this commit it was easy to track >> down, but I am wondering if there is any reason why we don't add a >> WARN_ON() if size is 0 in devm_kmalloc? It was essentially what I ended >> up doing to find the bug. >> >> Jon >> >> -- >> nvpublic > > Hi Jon, > > this is in line with what the regular kmalloc() does. If size is zero, > it returns ZERO_SIZE_PTR. It's not an error condition. Actually in > user-space malloc() does a similar thing: for size == 0 it allocates > one-byte and returns a pointer to it (at least in glibc). Yes that's fine, I was just wondering if there is any reason not to WARN as well? Cheers Jon -- nvpublic