+ gcc@gcc.gnu.org + Rikard Falkeborn <rikard.falkeb...@gmail.com> On Wed, Apr 27, 2022 at 01:16:58AM +0900, Vincent Mailhol wrote: > find_first_bit(), find_first_and_bit(), find_first_and_bit() and > find_first_and_bit() all invokes GENMASK(size - 1, 0). > > This triggers below warning when compiled with W=2. > > | ./include/linux/find.h: In function 'find_first_bit': > | ./include/linux/bits.h:25:36: warning: comparison of unsigned > | expression in '< 0' is always false [-Wtype-limits] > | 25 | __is_constexpr((l) > (h)), (l) > (h), 0))) > | | ^ > | ./include/linux/build_bug.h:16:62: note: in definition of macro > | 'BUILD_BUG_ON_ZERO' > | 16 | #define BUILD_BUG_ON_ZERO(e) ((int)(sizeof(struct { int:(-!!(e)); > }))) > | | ^ > | ./include/linux/bits.h:25:17: note: in expansion of macro '__is_constexpr' > | 25 | __is_constexpr((l) > (h)), (l) > (h), 0))) > | | ^~~~~~~~~~~~~~ > | ./include/linux/bits.h:38:10: note: in expansion of macro > 'GENMASK_INPUT_CHECK' > | 38 | (GENMASK_INPUT_CHECK(h, l) + __GENMASK(h, l)) > | | ^~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ > | ./include/linux/find.h:119:45: note: in expansion of macro 'GENMASK' > | 119 | unsigned long val = *addr & GENMASK(size - 1, 0); > | | ^~~~~~~ > > linux/find.h being a widely used header file, above warning show up in > thousand of files which include this header (either directly on > indirectly). > > Because it is a false positive, we just silence -Wtype-limits flag > locally to remove the spam. clang does not warn about it, so we just > apply the diag_ignore() directive to gcc. > > By doing so, the warnings for a W=2 build are reduced by > 34%. Benchmark was done with gcc 11.2.1 on Linux v5.17 x86_64 > allyesconfig (except CONFIG_WERROR). Beforethe patch: 515496 warnings > and after: 340097. > > For reference, past proposal to modify GENMASK_INPUT_CHECK() was > rejected in: > https://lore.kernel.org/all/20220304124416.1181029-1-mailhol.vinc...@wanadoo.fr/
So, here is nothing wrong with the kernel code and we have an alternative compiler (clang) that doesn't throw Wtype-limits. It sounds to me like an internal GCC problem, and I don't understand how hiding broken Wtype-limits on kernel side would help people to improve GCC. On the thread you mentioned above: > > > > Have you fixed W=1 warnings? > > > > Without fixing W=1 (which makes much more sense, when used with > > > > WERROR=y && COMPILE_TEST=y) this has no value. > > > > > > How is this connected? > > > > By priorities. > > I don't see much value in fixing W=2 per se if the code doesn't compile for > > W=1. > > *My code* compiles for W=1. For me, fixing this W=2 in the next in line > if speaking of priorities. > > I do not understand why I should be forbidden to fix a W=2 in the > file which I am maintaining on the grounds that some code to which > I do not care still has some W=1. If you are concerned about a particular driver - why don't you silence the warning in there? Or alternatively build it with clang? With all that, I think that the right way to go is to fix the root cause of this churn - broken Wtype-limits in GCC, and after that move Wtype-limits to W=1. Anything else looks hacky to me. Thanks, Yury > Signed-off-by: Vincent Mailhol <mailhol.vinc...@wanadoo.fr> > --- > include/linux/find.h | 6 ++++++ > 1 file changed, 6 insertions(+) > > diff --git a/include/linux/find.h b/include/linux/find.h > index 5bb6db213bcb..efd4b3f7dd17 100644 > --- a/include/linux/find.h > +++ b/include/linux/find.h > @@ -103,6 +103,10 @@ unsigned long find_next_zero_bit(const unsigned long > *addr, unsigned long size, > } > #endif > > +__diag_push(); > +__diag_ignore(GCC, 8, "-Wtype-limits", > + "GENMASK(size - 1, 0) yields 'comparison of unsigned expression > in < 0 is always false' which is OK"); > + > #ifndef find_first_bit > /** > * find_first_bit - find the first set bit in a memory region > @@ -193,6 +197,8 @@ unsigned long find_last_bit(const unsigned long *addr, > unsigned long size) > } > #endif > > +__diag_pop(); /* ignore -Wtype-limits */ > + > /** > * find_next_clump8 - find next 8-bit clump with set bits in a memory region > * @clump: location to store copy of found clump > -- > 2.35.1