Hi, Nathan Sorry for the incomplete commit message. I have tried to compile with gcc and clang-{11,13,14} on Debian 12. On my test environment, hypervisor emulates a range of bad memory where writes are ignored and reads always returns all ones. Memtest compiled with all clang-{11,13,14} can't find the bad memory without this patch. But gcc works fine. So it seems not a regression in clang. I don't have expertise in compilers. But I think {READ,WRITE}_ONCE can force the compiler to treat the iterating pointer as volatile. Welcome more comments ! BR Qiang -----Original Message----- From: Nathan Chancellor <nathan@xxxxxxxxxx> Sent: Thursday, March 14, 2024 1:22 AM To: Zhang, Qiang4 <qiang4.zhang@xxxxxxxxx> Cc: Andrew Morton <akpm@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>; Nick Desaulniers <ndesaulniers@xxxxxxxxxx>; Bill Wendling <morbo@xxxxxxxxxx>; Justin Stitt <justinstitt@xxxxxxxxxx>; linux-mm@xxxxxxxxx; linux-kernel@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx; llvm@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx; Stable@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx Subject: Re: [PATCH] memtest: use {READ,WRITE}_ONCE in memory scanning On Tue, Mar 12, 2024 at 04:04:23PM +0800, Qiang Zhang wrote: > memtest failed to find bad memory when compiled with clang. So use > {WRITE,READ}_ONCE to access memory to avoid compiler over optimization. This commit message is severely lacking in details in my opinion, especially for a patch marked for stable. Did a kernel or LLVM change cause this (i.e., has this always been an issue or is it a recent regression)? What is the transformation that LLVM does to break the test and why is using READ_ONCE() or WRITE_ONCE() sufficient to resolve it? > Cc: <Stable@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> > Signed-off-by: Qiang Zhang <qiang4.zhang@xxxxxxxxx> > --- > mm/memtest.c | 4 ++-- > 1 file changed, 2 insertions(+), 2 deletions(-) > > diff --git a/mm/memtest.c b/mm/memtest.c index > 32f3e9dda837..c2c609c39119 100644 > --- a/mm/memtest.c > +++ b/mm/memtest.c > @@ -51,10 +51,10 @@ static void __init memtest(u64 pattern, phys_addr_t start_phys, phys_addr_t size > last_bad = 0; > > for (p = start; p < end; p++) > - *p = pattern; > + WRITE_ONCE(*p, pattern); > > for (p = start; p < end; p++, start_phys_aligned += incr) { > - if (*p == pattern) > + if (READ_ONCE(*p) == pattern) > continue; > if (start_phys_aligned == last_bad + incr) { > last_bad += incr; > -- > 2.39.2 >