On Tue, Feb 9, 2010 at 18:34, M. Warner Losh <i...@bsdimp.com> wrote: > Greetings, > > I've found a few inconsistencies in the sockaddr stuff in the tree. > I'm not sure where to go to get a definitive answer, so I thought I'd > start here. > > I got here looking at the recent wake breakage on mips. It turns out > that the warning was: > > src/usr.sbin/wake/wake.c: In function 'find_ether': > src/usr.sbin/wake/wake.c:123: warning: cast increases required alignment of > target type > > which comes from > sdl = (struct sockaddr_dl *)ifa->ifa_addr; > > The problem is that on MIPS struct sockaddr * is byte aligned and > sockaddr_dl * is word aligned, so the compiler is rightly telling us > that there might be a problem here. > > However, further digging shows that there will never be a problem > here with alignment. struct sockaddr_storage has a int64 in it to > force it to be __aligned(8). So I thought to myself "why don't I just > add __aligned(8) to the struct sockaddr definition?" After all, the > kernel goes to great lengths to return data so aligned, and user code > also keeps things aligned. > > Sure enough, that fixes this warning. Yea. But, sadly, it causes > other problems. If you look at sbin/atm/atmconfig/natm.c you'll see > code like: > > static void > store_route(struct rt_msghdr *rtm) > { > ... > char *cp > struct sockaddr *sa; > ... > > cp = (char *)(rtm + 1); > ... > sa = (struct sockaddr *)cp; > cp += roundup(sa->sa_len, sizeof(long)); > ... > > which breaks because we're now casting from an __aligned(1) char * to > an __aligned(8) sockaddr *. > > And it is only rounding the size of the structure to long, rather than > int64 like sockaddr_storage suggests is the proper alignment. But I > haven't looked in the kernel to see if there's an issue there with > routing sockets or not. > > The other extreme is to put __aligned(1) on all the sockaddr_foo > structures. This would solve the compiler warning, but would have a > negative effect on performance in accessing these elements (because > the compiler would have to generate calls to bcopy or equivalent to > access the scalar members that are larger than a byte). This cure > would be worse than the disease. > > So the question here is "What is the right solution here?" It has me > stumped. So I dropped WARNS level down from 6 to 3 for wake.c.
Hi Warner, I got into the same kind of trouble when I tried to raise the WARNS level above 3 for inetd and others. I guess everything which uses some sockaddr casting or (in the case of inetd) some of these macros: http://fxr.googlebit.com/source/sys/netinet6/in6.h?v=8-CURRENT#L233 It's a pity that only this keeps some programs from going to a WARNS level of 6. _______________________________________________ freebsd-net@freebsd.org mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-net To unsubscribe, send any mail to "freebsd-net-unsubscr...@freebsd.org"