[PATCH v1] powerpc: Include running function as first entry in save_stack_trace() and friends

Marco Elver elver at google.com
Fri Mar 5 04:25:33 AEDT 2021


On Thu, Mar 04, 2021 at 04:59PM +0000, Mark Rutland wrote:
> On Thu, Mar 04, 2021 at 04:30:34PM +0100, Marco Elver wrote:
> > On Thu, 4 Mar 2021 at 15:57, Mark Rutland <mark.rutland at arm.com> wrote:
> > > [adding Mark Brown]
> > >
> > > The bigger problem here is that skipping is dodgy to begin with, and
> > > this is still liable to break in some cases. One big concern is that
> > > (especially with LTO) we cannot guarantee the compiler will not inline
> > > or outline functions, causing the skipp value to be too large or too
> > > small. That's liable to happen to callers, and in theory (though
> > > unlikely in practice), portions of arch_stack_walk() or
> > > stack_trace_save() could get outlined too.
> > >
> > > Unless we can get some strong guarantees from compiler folk such that we
> > > can guarantee a specific function acts boundary for unwinding (and
> > > doesn't itself get split, etc), the only reliable way I can think to
> > > solve this requires an assembly trampoline. Whatever we do is liable to
> > > need some invasive rework.
> > 
> > Will LTO and friends respect 'noinline'?
> 
> I hope so (and suspect we'd have more problems otherwise), but I don't
> know whether they actually so.
> 
> I suspect even with 'noinline' the compiler is permitted to outline
> portions of a function if it wanted to (and IIUC it could still make
> specialized copies in the absence of 'noclone').
> 
> > One thing I also noticed is that tail calls would also cause the stack
> > trace to appear somewhat incomplete (for some of my tests I've
> > disabled tail call optimizations).
> 
> I assume you mean for a chain A->B->C where B tail-calls C, you get a
> trace A->C? ... or is A going missing too?

Correct, it's just the A->C outcome.

> > Is there a way to also mark a function non-tail-callable?
> 
> I think this can be bodged using __attribute__((optimize("$OPTIONS")))
> on a caller to inhibit TCO (though IIRC GCC doesn't reliably support
> function-local optimization options), but I don't expect there's any way
> to mark a callee as not being tail-callable.

I don't think this is reliable. It'd be
__attribute__((optimize("-fno-optimize-sibling-calls"))), but doesn't
work if applied to the function we do not want to tail-call-optimize,
but would have to be applied to the function that does the tail-calling.
So it's a bit backwards, even if it worked.

> Accoding to the GCC documentation, GCC won't TCO noreturn functions, but
> obviously that's not something we can use generally.
> 
> https://gcc.gnu.org/onlinedocs/gcc/Common-Function-Attributes.html#Common-Function-Attributes

Perhaps we can ask the toolchain folks to help add such an attribute. Or
maybe the feature already exists somewhere, but hidden.

+Cc linux-toolchains at vger.kernel.org

> > But I'm also not sure if with all that we'd be guaranteed the code we
> > want, even though in practice it might.
> 
> True! I'd just like to be on the least dodgy ground we can be.

It's been dodgy for a while, and I'd welcome any low-cost fixes to make
it less dodgy in the short-term at least. :-)

Thanks,
-- Marco


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