On Fri, Aug 5, 2022 at 3:27 AM Jose E. Marchesi via Gcc-patches <gcc-patches@gcc.gnu.org> wrote: > > > Hi people! > > First of all, a bit of context. > > It is common for C BPF programs to use variables that are implicitly set > by the underlying BPF machinery and not by the program itself. It is > also necessary for these variables to be stored in read-only storage so > the BPF verifier recognizes them as such. This leads to declarations > using both `const' and `volatile' qualifiers, like this: > > const volatile unsigned char is_allow_list = 0; > > Where `volatile' is used to avoid the compiler to optimize out the > variable, or turn it into a constant, and `const' to make sure it is > placed in .rodata. > > Now, it happens that: > > - GCC places `const volatile' objects in the .data section, under the > assumption that `volatile' somehow voids the `const'. > > - LLVM places `const volatile' objects in .rodata, under the > assumption that `volatile' is orthogonal to `const'. > > So there is a divergence, and this divergence has practical > consequences: it makes BPF programs compiled with GCC to not work > properly. > > When looking into this, I found this bugzilla: > > https://gcc.gnu.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=25521 > "change semantics of const volatile variables" > > which was filed back in 2005. This report was already asking to put > `const volatile' objects in .rodata, questioning the current behavior. > > While discussing this in the #gcc IRC channel I was pointed out to the > following excerpt from the C18 spec: > > 6.7.3 Type qualifiers / 5 The properties associated with qualified > types are meaningful only for expressions that are > lval-values [note 135] > > > 135) The implementation may place a const object that is not > volatile in a read-only region of storage. Moreover, the > implementation need not allocate storage for such an object if > its $ address is never used. > > This footnote may be interpreted as if const objects that are volatile > shouldn't be put in read-only storage. Even if I was not very convinced > of that interpretation (see my earlier comment in BZ 25521) I filed the > following issue in the LLVM tracker in order to discuss the matter: > > https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project/issues/56468 > > As you can see, Aaron Ballman, one of the LLVM hackers, asked the WG14 > reflectors about this. He reported back that the reflectors consider > footnote 135 has not normative value. > > So, not having a normative mandate on either direction, there are two > options: > > a) To change GCC to place `const volatile' objects in .rodata instead > of .data. > > b) To change LLVM to place `const volatile' objects in .data instead > of .rodata. > > Considering that: > > - One target (bpf-unknown-none) breaks with the current GCC behavior. > > - No target/platform relies on the GCC behavior, that we know. (And it > is unlikely there is any, at least for targets also supported by > LLVM.) > > - Changing the LLVM behavior at this point would be very severely > traumatic for the BPF people and their users. > > I think the right thing to do is a). > Therefore this patch. > > A note about the patch itself: > > I am not that familiar with the middle-end and in this patch I am > assuming that a `var|constructor + SIDE_EFFECTS' is the result of > `volatile' (or an equivalent language construction) and nothing else. > It would be good if some middle-end wizard could confirm this.
Yes, for decls that sounds correct. For a CTOR it just means re-evaluation is not safe. > Regtested in x86_64-linux-gnu and bpf-unknown-none. > No regressions observed. I think this warrants a testcase. I'm not sure I agree about the whole thing though, I'm leaving it to Joseph. > gcc/ChangeLog: > > PR middle-end/25521 > * varasm.cc (categorize_decl_for_section): Place `const volatile' > objects in read-only sections. > (default_select_section): Likewise. > --- > gcc/varasm.cc | 3 --- > 1 file changed, 3 deletions(-) > > diff --git a/gcc/varasm.cc b/gcc/varasm.cc > index 4db8506b106..7864db11faf 100644 > --- a/gcc/varasm.cc > +++ b/gcc/varasm.cc > @@ -6971,7 +6971,6 @@ default_select_section (tree decl, int reloc, > { > if (! ((flag_pic && reloc) > || !TREE_READONLY (decl) > - || TREE_SIDE_EFFECTS (decl) > || !TREE_CONSTANT (decl))) > return readonly_data_section; > } > @@ -7005,7 +7004,6 @@ categorize_decl_for_section (const_tree decl, int reloc) > if (bss_initializer_p (decl)) > ret = SECCAT_BSS; > else if (! TREE_READONLY (decl) > - || TREE_SIDE_EFFECTS (decl) > || (DECL_INITIAL (decl) > && ! TREE_CONSTANT (DECL_INITIAL (decl)))) > { > @@ -7046,7 +7044,6 @@ categorize_decl_for_section (const_tree decl, int reloc) > else if (TREE_CODE (decl) == CONSTRUCTOR) > { > if ((reloc & targetm.asm_out.reloc_rw_mask ()) > - || TREE_SIDE_EFFECTS (decl) > || ! TREE_CONSTANT (decl)) > ret = SECCAT_DATA; > else > -- > 2.30.2 >