The following reply was made to PR kern/151304; it has been noted by GNATS.
From: Bruce Evans <b...@optusnet.com.au> To: Svatopluk Kraus <onw...@gmail.com> Cc: freebsd-gnats-sub...@freebsd.org, freebsd-bugs@freebsd.org Subject: Re: kern/151304: patch - definitions of variables tested by ASSERT_ATOMIC_LOAD_PTR Date: Sat, 9 Oct 2010 07:16:43 +1100 (EST) On Fri, 8 Oct 2010, Svatopluk Kraus wrote: >> Description: > A macro ASSERT_ATOMIC_LOAD_PTR() hits in colfire port I work on. It is > possibly due to use of GNU GCC (4.5.1) compiler -Os option (size > optimalization). The macro is applied on four places: Perhaps gcc-4.5.1 -Os is doing invalid packing of structs, or FreeBSD has broken packing of structs using the __packed mistake and gcc-4.5.1 -Os exposes the brokenness by exploiting __packed more. Probably the latter. BTW, gcc-4.2.1 -Os is still completely broken on kernels. It fails to compile some files due to problems with -Wuninitialized, and when this is worked around it produces a kernel that is about 50% larger than one produced by gcc-4.2.1 -O. A few years ago I thought the problem was excessive inlining, but when I tried to fix it a few weeks ago, reducing the inlining caused larger problems and still gave large negative optimizations. >> Fix: > I patch the entries definitions in structures by align attribute, I believe > it is better than to do nothing. Moreover, it solved my problem. > > Patch attached with submission follows: > > Index: sys/sys/_rwlock.h > =================================================================== > --- sys/sys/_rwlock.h (revision 213567) > +++ sys/sys/_rwlock.h (working copy) > @@ -37,7 +37,7 @@ > */ > struct rwlock { > struct lock_object lock_object; > - volatile uintptr_t rw_lock; > + volatile uintptr_t rw_lock __aligned(4); > }; > > #endif /* !_SYS__RWLOCK_H_ */ > ... This does nothing good on arches with 64-bit pointers. With gcc-4.2.1 on amd64, it seems to do nothing -- the natural alignment of a uintptr_t on amd64 is 8, and asking for a smaller alignment using __aligned(4) apparently makes no difference. It takes __aligned(more_than_8) or __packed to make a difference. Here is an example of creating an alignment bug due using __packed and just gcc-4.2.1 on amd64: % #include <sys/cdefs.h> % #include <stddef.h> % % struct foo { % int x; % long y __aligned(4); % }; % % struct bar { % char c; % struct foo d; % } __packed; % % int z = offsetof(struct foo, y); % int t = sizeof (struct bar); 'y' has the correct offset of 8, but `struct bar' has size 17, so the `y' nested in it cannot possibly be aligned properly, at least if there is an array of `struct bar' with at least 2 elements. I think this is a compiler bug -- the explicit __aligned(4) in the nested struct should force alignment of container structs (but only to 4 here, not the 8 that is required). Bruce _______________________________________________ freebsd-bugs@freebsd.org mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-bugs To unsubscribe, send any mail to "freebsd-bugs-unsubscr...@freebsd.org"