On Fri, Jan 26, 2024 at 03:55:02PM -0800, Guenter Roeck wrote: > Anyway, how did you find that ? Is there a magic trick to find the > actual code causing the warning ? I am asking because we had seen > similar warnings before, and it would help to know how to find the > problematic code. The easiest way I have found is figuring out what primitive is causing the warning (memset, memcpy) then just commenting out the uses in the particular file until the warning goes away. Sometimes it is quick like in this case since there were only two instances of memcpy() in that file but other cases it can definitely take time. There could be potential issues with that approach if the problematic use is in a header, at which point you could generate a preprocessed ('.i') file and see where fortify_memcpy_chk() or fortify_memset_chk() come from in that file. Cheers, Nathan