Buggy commit tracked to: "Re: [PATCH 2/9] iov_iter: move rw_copy_check_uvector() into lib/iov_iter.c"
David Laight
David.Laight at ACULAB.COM
Thu Oct 22 19:40:32 AEDT 2020
From: David Hildenbrand
> Sent: 22 October 2020 09:35
>
> On 22.10.20 10:26, Greg KH wrote:
> > On Thu, Oct 22, 2020 at 12:39:14AM +0100, Al Viro wrote:
> >> On Wed, Oct 21, 2020 at 06:13:01PM +0200, Greg KH wrote:
> >>> On Fri, Sep 25, 2020 at 06:51:39AM +0200, Christoph Hellwig wrote:
> >>>> From: David Laight <David.Laight at ACULAB.COM>
> >>>>
> >>>> This lets the compiler inline it into import_iovec() generating
> >>>> much better code.
> >>>>
> >>>> Signed-off-by: David Laight <david.laight at aculab.com>
> >>>> Signed-off-by: Christoph Hellwig <hch at lst.de>
> >>>> ---
> >>>> fs/read_write.c | 179 ------------------------------------------------
> >>>> lib/iov_iter.c | 176 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
> >>>> 2 files changed, 176 insertions(+), 179 deletions(-)
> >>>
> >>> Strangely, this commit causes a regression in Linus's tree right now.
> >>>
> >>> I can't really figure out what the regression is, only that this commit
> >>> triggers a "large Android system binary" from working properly. There's
> >>> no kernel log messages anywhere, and I don't have any way to strace the
> >>> thing in the testing framework, so any hints that people can provide
> >>> would be most appreciated.
> >>
> >> It's a pure move - modulo changed line breaks in the argument lists
> >> the functions involved are identical before and after that (just checked
> >> that directly, by checking out the trees before and after, extracting two
> >> functions in question from fs/read_write.c and lib/iov_iter.c (before and
> >> after, resp.) and checking the diff between those.
> >>
> >> How certain is your bisection?
> >
> > The bisection is very reproducable.
> >
> > But, this looks now to be a compiler bug. I'm using the latest version
> > of clang and if I put "noinline" at the front of the function,
> > everything works.
>
> Well, the compiler can do more invasive optimizations when inlining. If
> you have buggy code that relies on some unspecified behavior, inlining
> can change the behavior ... but going over that code, there isn't too
> much action going on. At least nothing screamed at me.
Apart from all the optimisations that get rid off the 'pass be reference'
parameters and strange conditional tests.
Plenty of scope for the compiler getting it wrong.
But nothing even vaguely illegal.
David
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