On Sat, Aug 12, 2023 at 05:51:53AM +0800, Zhangjin Wu wrote: > As reported and suggested by Willy, the inline __sysret() helper > introduces three types of conversions and increases the size: > > (1) the "unsigned long" argument to __sysret() forces a sign extension > from all sys_* functions that used to return 'int' > > (2) the comparison with the error range now has to be performed on a > 'unsigned long' instead of an 'int' > > (3) the return value from __sysret() is a 'long' (note, a signed long) > which then has to be turned back to an 'int' before being returned by the > caller to satisfy the caller's prototype. > > To fix up this, firstly, let's use macro instead of inline function to > preserves the input type and avoids these useless conversions (1), (3). > > Secondly, since all of the sys_* functions have been converted to return > integer, now, it is able to remove comparison to a 'unsigned long' > -MAX_ERRNO (2) and restore the simple sign comparison as before. > (...) > +/* Syscall return helper, set errno as -ret when ret < 0 */ > +#define __sysret(arg) \ > +({ \ > + __typeof__(arg) __ret = (arg); \ > + if (__ret < 0) { \ > + SET_ERRNO(-__ret); \ > + __ret = -1L; \ > + } \ > + __ret; \ > +}) Except that this now breaks brk(), mmap() and sbrk() by taking any value with MSB set as an error. Also you've re-introduced the problem you've faced with const. See my simplification in the other thread by using "?:" which does avoids any assignment. Let's just roll brk(), mmap() and sbrk() to their original, working, definition: static __attribute__((unused)) void *mmap(void *addr, size_t length, int prot, int flags, int fd, off_t offset) { void *ret = sys_mmap(addr, length, prot, flags, fd, offset); if ((unsigned long)ret >= -MAX_ERRNO) { SET_ERRNO(-(long)ret); ret = MAP_FAILED; } return ret; } And we're done, you can then keep the simplified __sysret() macro for all other call places. Willy