Hi all, Thanks a lot for this, Richard: https://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/mtd/linux.git/log/?h=mtd%2Fnext&qt=grep&q=fall-through There are only two of these warnings left to be addressed in MTD[1]: > @@ -3280,12 +3280,14 @@ static void onenand_check_features(struct mtd_info *mtd) > if ((this->version_id & 0xf) == 0xe) > this->options |= ONENAND_HAS_NOP_1; > } > + /* fall through */ > > case ONENAND_DEVICE_DENSITY_2Gb: > /* 2Gb DDP does not have 2 plane */ > if (!ONENAND_IS_DDP(this)) > this->options |= ONENAND_HAS_2PLANE; > this->options |= ONENAND_HAS_UNLOCK_ALL; > + /* fall through */ This looks strange. In ONENAND_DEVICE_DENSITY_2Gb: ONENAND_HAS_UNLOCK_ALL is set unconditionally. But then, under ONENAND_DEVICE_DENSITY_1Gb, the same option is set only if process is evaluated to true. Same problem with ONENAND_HAS_2PLANE: - it is set in ONENAND_DEVICE_DENSITY_4Gb only if ONENAND_IS_DDP() - it is unset in ONENAND_DEVICE_DENSITY_2Gb only if !ONENAND_IS_DDP() Maybe this portion should be reworked because I am unsure if this is a missing fall through or a bug. Thanks -- Gustavo [1] https://lore.kernel.org/patchwork/patch/1036251/ On 4/16/19 3:49 PM, Gustavo A. R. Silva wrote: > Hi Miquel, > > On 4/16/19 12:24 PM, Miquel Raynal wrote: >> Hi Gustavo, >> >> "Gustavo A. R. Silva" <gustavo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote on Mon, 15 Apr >> 2019 07:57:11 -0500: >> >>> Hi Miquel, >>> >>> On 4/15/19 3:44 AM, Miquel Raynal wrote: >>>> Hi Gustavo, >>>> >>>> "Gustavo A. R. Silva" <gustavo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote on Wed, 10 Apr >>>> 2019 16:16:51 -0500: >>>> >>>>> Hi all, >>>>> >>>>> If no one cares I'll add this to my tree for 5.2. >>>> >>>> Which tree are you talking about? >>>> >>> >>> This one: >>> >>> https://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/gustavoars/linux.git/log/?h=for-next/kspp >>> >>>> Please let the MTD maintainers take patches through their tree. We >>>> might be late but this is definitely not a good reason to bypass us. >>>> >>> It's a bit confusing when patches are being ignored for more than two >>> months: >>> >>> https://lore.kernel.org/patchwork/patch/1040099/ >>> https://lore.kernel.org/patchwork/patch/1040100/ >>> https://lore.kernel.org/patchwork/patch/1040098/ >>> >> >> Patches posted at -rc6 right before the last release? Come on! Gustavo, >> we always spend more time for you than for other contributors because we >> do not trust your changes. We could apply them blindly but we don't do >> that for other (worthy) contributions, so why shall we do it for you? >> > > Oh, I didn't know about that. You don't have to blindly trust me. > I sincerely think people should always double check any changes, > regardless of their level of trust in a particular person/entity. > > Anyway, I really appreciate your sincerity because now I think we can > come up with a good strategy to collaborate with each other smoothly. > > It seems to me that the root cause for this lack of trust, and, maybe > even despite towards these type of patches, is basically misunderstanding > of what I'm trying to accomplish and, more importantly, how I do it. > >> I think you could at least flag these changes as "automatic and >> unverified" in the commit log so that when git blaming, people could >> know that the additional explicit /* fallthrough */ comment might be >> wrong and was just added in order to limit the number of warnings when >> enabling the extra GCC warning. >> > > I don't do that because that's not how I'm tackling this task. > > I'm not sending these patches with the intention of merely accumulate > contributions --and I'm not saying you say so, this is just for > clarification-- or because of a lack of more technically interesting > things to do in the kernel --this is certainly not the only thing I'm > working on. What I'm trying to accomplish is to be able to add > -Wimplicit-fallthrough to the build so that the kernel will stay > entirely free of this class of bug going forward; is that simple. Now, > why is that? because sometimes people forget to place a break/return > and a bug is introduced, and it could take up to 7 years to fix it [1]. > > Now, I really try to determine if I'm dealing with a false positive or > an actual bug every time. I read the code and try to understand the > context around which each warning is reported. You can tell it's not > the most sexy and glamorous thing. And a static analyzer is clearly not > sophisticated enough to spot actual bugs in this situation, not even > the Coccinelle tool. > > I had a similar conversation with a wireless maintainer a while ago. He > claimed I was not even looking at the code and that I was blindly using > a transformation tool [2]. Please, take a look at it, so you can better > understand my workflow. > > I have gone through this process of reading code all over the tree and > trying to understand it hundreds of times; there were more than 2000 of > these warnings at the time I started working on this, and there are are > around 50 left in linux-next. Of course, the vast majority of cases have > resulted to be obvious false positives, but it's me who have determined > that, by auditing each case, so I haven't blindly placed any fall-through > comment. > > Now, have I made any mistake? Of course! but I have also amended it > immediately [3][4]. And the number of bugs I have fixed while working > on this task is much bigger. A clear example of how hard this can be is > documented in this thread, in which you, being an MTD maintainer, cannot > clearly determine if this is a false positive or an actual bug [5]. It > can be troublesome for you for a number of reasons --I'm not judging that. > I'm trying to illustrate the magnitude of the task as a whole. > > So, this patches together with the related bugfixes are part of that > whole. And, although sometimes painful for everyone, that whole is > what's important, and worth it. > >>> Certainly, Richard Weinberger replied to this one. But I couldn't >>> find a tree to which this patch was applied, in case it actually >>> was. >>> >>> It's a common practice for maintainers to reply saying that a patch >>> has been finally applied, and in most cases they also explicitly >>> mention the tree and branch to which it was applied. All this info >>> is really helpful for people working all over the tree. >> >> It is common practice for contributors to understand what they >> are doing before submitting a change and this is something that you >> clearly don't try to do. >> > > This is too much to say, and sadly, it's not uncommon for even the most > senior people to assume others don't even make an effort to think through > their work, before at least asking. But I have already explained myself > above. > > Regarding this: > >> Patches posted at -rc6 right before the last release? Come on! Gustavo, > > I don't expect people to send an urgent pull-request to merge this > patches into mainline as soon as they arrive, and I have never requested > such thing. > > Lastly, what I really want we *all* get out of this conversation is a > better way to collaborate with each other. For me, and I guess for most > contributors, it's good enough to have a confirmation that the accepted > patch has been applied to a certain branch in a certain tree. I understand > this may sound like an special request, in particular because, currently, > the number of people working all over the tree is not that big, so it > is not that critical for maintainers to adopt certain practices that > benefits this small group of contributors, but thanks to recent initiatives > as The Linux Kernel Mentorship project I think this is going to change and > it will force us all to evolve in the right direction. > > By the way, notice that these are the last patches for MTD. :) > > Thank you > -- > Gustavo > > References: > > [1] https://lore.kernel.org/patchwork/patch/1042976/ > [2] https://lore.kernel.org/patchwork/patch/1002568/ > [3] https://lore.kernel.org/patchwork/patch/970617/ > [4] https://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/torvalds/linux.git/commit/?h=v5.1-rc5&id=ad0eaee6195db1db1749dd46b9e6f4466793d178 > [5] https://lore.kernel.org/patchwork/patch/1036251/ > > > ______________________________________________________ Linux MTD discussion mailing list http://lists.infradead.org/mailman/listinfo/linux-mtd/