On Sat, May 7, 2022 at 2:01 AM Finn Thain <fthain@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > On Fri, 6 May 2022, Niklas Schnelle wrote: > > On Fri, 2022-05-06 at 19:12 +1000, Finn Thain wrote: > > > On Thu, 5 May 2022, Bjorn Helgaas wrote: > > > > > > > > I mooted a s390 inb() implementation like "return ~0" because that's > > > > what happens on most arches when there's no device to respond to the > > > > inb(). > > > > > > > > The HAS_IOPORT dependencies are fairly ugly IMHO, and they clutter > > > > drivers that use I/O ports in some cases but not others. But maybe > > > > it's the most practical way. > > > > > > > > > > Do you mean, "the most practical way to avoid a compiler warning on > > > s390"? What about "#pragma GCC diagnostic ignored"? > > > > This actually happens with clang. > > That suggests a clang bug to me. If you believe GCC should behave like > clang, then I guess the pragma above really is the one you want. If you > somehow feel that the kernel should cater to gcc and clang even where they > disagree then you would have to use "#pragma clang diagnostic ignored". I don't see how you can blame the compiler for this. On architectures with a zero PCI_IOBASE, an inb(0x2f8) literally becomes var = *(u8*)((NULL + 0x2f8); If you run a driver that does this, the kernel gets a page fault for the NULL page and reports an Oops. clang tells you 'warning: performing pointer arithmetic on a null pointer has undefined behavior', which is not exactly spot on, but close enough to warn you that you probably shouldn't do this. gcc doesn't warn here, but it does warn about an array out-of-bounds access when you pass such a pointer into memcpy or another string function. > > Apart from that, I think this would also fall under the same argument as > > the original patch Linus unpulled. We would just paint over someting > > that we know at compile time won't work: > > > > https://lore.kernel.org/lkml/CAHk-=wg80je=K7madF4e7WrRNp37e3qh6y10Svhdc7O8SZ_-8g@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx/ > > > > I wasn't advocating adding any warnings. > > If you know at compile time that a driver won't work, the usual solution > is scripts/config -d CONFIG_SOME_UNDESIRED_DRIVER. Why is that no > longer appropriate for drivers that use IO ports? This was never an option, we rely on 'make allmodconfig' to build without warnings on all architectures for finding regressions. Any driver that depends on architecture specific interfaces must not get selected on architectures that don't have those interfaces. Arnd