On Wed, 7 Apr 2021 09:14:29 +0200 Arnd Bergmann <arnd@xxxxxxxx> wrote: > On Wed, Apr 7, 2021 at 2:24 AM Marek Behún <kabel@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > > > The -Wextra flag enables -Woverride-init in newer versions of GCC. > > > > This causes the compiler to warn when a value is written twice in a > > designated initializer, for example: > > int x[1] = { > > [0] = 3, > > [0] = 3, > > }; > > > > Note that for clang, this was disabled from the beginning with > > -Wno-initializer-overrides in commit a1494304346a3 ("kbuild: add all > > Clang-specific flags unconditionally"). > > > > This prevents us from implementing complex macros for compile-time > > initializers. > > I think this is generally a useful warning, and it has found a number > of real bugs. I would want this to be enabled in both gcc and clang > by default, and I have previously sent both bugfixes and patches to > disable it locally. > > > For example a macro of the form INITIALIZE_BITMAP(bits...) that can be > > used as > > static DECLARE_BITMAP(bm, 64) = INITIALIZE_BITMAP(0, 1, 32, 33); > > can only be implemented by allowing a designated initializer to > > initialize the same members multiple times (because the compiler > > complains even if the multiple initializations initialize to the same > > value). > > We don't have this kind of macro at the moment, and this may just mean > you need to try harder to come up with a definition that only initializes > each member once if you want to add this. > > How do you currently define it? > > Arnd You can look at the current definition in this patch https://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/kabel/linux.git/commit/?h=marvell10g-updates&id=a4ba5e6563ac4d9e352f55fbae8431339001acf1 And the previous patch, adding variadic-macro.h https://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/kabel/linux.git/commit/?h=marvell10g-updates&id=d5f8438024b688e96bdd16349f717e5469183362 I fear it won't be possible to expand a macro in such a way to initialize each member only once, without giving it the number of array members it has to fill as a constant, i.e. if the bitmap is 100 bits on a 32 bit machine, it has to fill up to 4 longs, so we would need to give 4 as an argument: ... = INITIALIZE_BITMAP(4, ...); but DIV_ROUND_UP(100, BITS_PER_LONG) won't work. Another way around this is to use _Pragma to disable this specific warning for a specific part of code. Unfortunately it seems that this _Pragma operator cannot be used withing the designated initializer, it has to be outside the expression declaring the variable, i.e. _Pragma("GCC diagnostic ignored \"-Woverride-init\"") ... = INITIALIZE_BITMAP(...); What I am frustrated about is why doesn't the compiler have the option to warn only if designated initializer initializes the same member to a different value... Marek