On Wed, Aug 09, 2023 at 09:37 +0100 Jonathan Cameron <Jonathan.Cameron@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > On Tue, 8 Aug 2023 05:10:04 -0600 > "Gustavo A. R. Silva" <gustavoars@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > >> On Tue, Aug 08, 2023 at 04:37:19PM +0800, GONG, Ruiqi wrote: >> > From: "GONG, Ruiqi" <gongruiqi1@xxxxxxxxxx> >> > >> > When compiling with gcc 13 with -Warray-bounds enabled: >> > >> > In file included from drivers/iio/proximity/irsd200.c:15: >> > In function ‘iio_push_to_buffers_with_timestamp’, >> > inlined from ‘irsd200_trigger_handler’ at drivers/iio/proximity/irsd200.c:770:2: >> > ./include/linux/iio/buffer.h:42:46: error: array subscript ‘int64_t {aka long long int}[0]’ >> > is partly outside array bounds of ‘s16[1]’ {aka ‘short int[1]’} [-Werror=array-bounds=] >> > 42 | ((int64_t *)data)[ts_offset] = timestamp; >> > | ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~^~~~~~~~~~~ >> > drivers/iio/proximity/irsd200.c: In function ‘irsd200_trigger_handler’: >> > drivers/iio/proximity/irsd200.c:763:13: note: object ‘buf’ of size 2 >> > 763 | s16 buf = 0; >> > | ^~~ >> > >> > The problem seems to be that irsd200_trigger_handler() is taking a s16 >> > variable as an int64_t buffer. Fix it by extending the buffer to 64 bits. >> >> Thanks for working on this! >> >> > >> > Link: https://github.com/KSPP/linux/issues/331 >> > Signed-off-by: GONG, Ruiqi <gongruiqi1@xxxxxxxxxx> >> >> Acked-by: Gustavo A. R. Silva <gustavoars@xxxxxxxxxx> > > Good find on the bug, but the fix is wrong even if it squashes the error. Yeah, this one slipped through! [...] >> > RFC: It's a preliminary patch since I'm not familiar with this hardware. >> > Further comments/reviews are needed about whether this fix is correct, >> > or we should use iio_push_to_buffers() instead of the *_with_timestamp() >> > version. >> > >> > drivers/iio/proximity/irsd200.c | 4 ++-- >> > 1 file changed, 2 insertions(+), 2 deletions(-) >> > >> > diff --git a/drivers/iio/proximity/irsd200.c b/drivers/iio/proximity/irsd200.c >> > index 5bd791b46d98..34c479881bdf 100644 >> > --- a/drivers/iio/proximity/irsd200.c >> > +++ b/drivers/iio/proximity/irsd200.c >> > @@ -759,10 +759,10 @@ static irqreturn_t irsd200_trigger_handler(int irq, void *pollf) >> > { >> > struct iio_dev *indio_dev = ((struct iio_poll_func *)pollf)->indio_dev; >> > struct irsd200_data *data = iio_priv(indio_dev); >> > - s16 buf = 0; >> > + int64_t buf = 0; > > s64 as internal kernel type. > More importantly needs to be at least s64 buf[2]; as the offset > https://elixir.bootlin.com/linux/latest/source/include/linux/iio/buffer.h#L41 > will be 1 due to this filling the timestamp in at first 8 byte aligned location > after the data that is already in the buffer. > > With hindsight was a bad decision a long time ago not to force people to also > pass the size into this function so we could detect this at runtime at least. > Hard to repair now give very large number of drivers using this and the fact > that it's not always easy to work out that size. Unfortunately occasionally > one of these slips through review :( > > I suppose we could, in some cases check if the buffer was at least 16 bytes which > would get us some of the way. Yes, that would actually be helpful.