On 13-04-22 03:58 PM, Steven Rostedt wrote:
On Mon, 2013-04-22 at 13:44 -0700, Andrew Morton wrote:
On Wed, 17 Apr 2013 17:03:21 -0700 (PDT) David Rientjes <rientjes@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
On Wed, 17 Apr 2013, Steven Rostedt wrote:
The slab.c code has a size check macro that checks the size of the
following structs:
struct arraycache_init
struct kmem_list3
The index_of() function that takes the sizeof() of the above two structs
and does an unnecessary __builtin_constant_p() on that. As sizeof() will
always end up being a constant making this always be true. The code is
not incorrect, but it just adds added complexity, and confuses users and
wastes the time of reviewers of the code, who spends time trying to
figure out why the builtin_constant_p() was used.
This patch is just a clean up that makes the index_of() code a little
bit less complex.
Signed-off-by: Steven Rostedt <rostedt@xxxxxxxxxxx>
Acked-by: David Rientjes <rientjes@xxxxxxxxxx>
Adding Pekka to the cc.
I ducked this patch because it seemed rather pointless - but a little
birdie told me that there is a secret motivation which seems pretty
reasonable to me. So I shall await chirp-the-second, which hopefully
will have a fuller and franker changelog ;)
<little birdie voice>
The real motivation behind this patch was it prevents LLVM (Clang) from
compiling the kernel. There's currently a bug in Clang where it can't
determine if a variable is constant or not, so instead, when
__builtin_constant_p() is used, it just treats it like it isn't a
constant (always taking the slow *safe* path).
Unfortunately, the "confusing" code of slub.c that unnecessarily uses
the __builtin_constant_p() will fail to compile if the variable passed
in is not constant. As Clang will say constants are not constant at this
point, the compile fails.
When looking into this, we found the only two users of the index_of()
static function that has this issue, passes in size_of(), which will
always be a constant, making the check redundant.
Note, this is a bug in Clang that will hopefully be fixed soon. But for
now, this strange redundant compile time check is preventing Clang from
even testing the Linux kernel build.
</little birdie voice>
And I still think the original change log has rational for the change,
as it does make it rather confusing to what is happening there.
-- Steve
Just to pipe up since Steve was helping me out with this patch.
I just want to make it clear that in no way am I trying to sneak any
code into the kernel in order to merely support Clang (certainly the
motivation for the patch wasn't meant to be a secret). That in this case
the code might be considered clearer at the same time as enabling Clang
to be used to compile this portion of code seemed to be a win-win
situation to me.
I certainly thank Steve, Christoph and Andrew for their support in
principle in this particular matter (not that it is yet a done deal). I
merely complained about this particular issue at my talk at the recent
Collab Summit and Steve jumped in to follow up with this particular
solution as well as connecting up myself with the three of them (all of
us being in the same hotel in San Francisco at the same time). My god
Steve works fast! It made my head spin.
My motivation (as a part of the LLVMLinux project) is purely to provide
another choice of toolchain to the kernel developer and system
integrator, some of whom would like the choice of using (or at least
trying) Clang. I certainly do not intentionally want to negatively
impact the performance nor code quality of the kernel code base to the
best of my ability (quite the opposite actually).
I think I can safely say that the competition between the 2 toolchains
has already made both even stronger than they were previously (certainly
gcc 4.8 and the upcoming LLVM/Clang 3.3 seem to be the best either have
ever been).
As far as __builtin_constant_p() in clang goes, it gets it right in many
places (i.e. agrees with how gcc evaluates it), but in this particular
situation it got it wrong. However, in this case I was having troubles
understanding why __builtin_constant_p() was being used the way it was
in slab.c at all...
Behan
--
Behan Webster
behanw@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
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