[RFC PATCH v3 11/12] powerpc: Remove unreachable() from WARN_ON()

Naveen N. Rao naveen.n.rao at linux.vnet.ibm.com
Thu Jun 30 20:37:47 AEST 2022


Christophe Leroy wrote:
> 
> 
> Le 30/06/2022 à 10:05, Naveen N. Rao a écrit :
>> Christophe Leroy wrote:
>>>> The builtin variant of unreachable (__builtin_unreachable()) works.
>>>>
>>>> How about using that instead of unreachable() ?
>>>>
>>>>
>>>
>>> In fact the problem comes from the macro annotate_unreachable() which 
>>> is called by unreachable() before calling __build_unreachable().
>>>
>>> Seems like this macro adds (after the unconditional trap twui) a call 
>>> to an empty function whose address is listed in section 
>>> .discard.unreachable
>>>
>>>      1c78:       00 00 e0 0f     twui    r0,0
>>>      1c7c:       55 e7 ff 4b     bl      3d0 
>>> <qdisc_root_sleeping_lock.part.0>
>>>
>>>
>>> RELOCATION RECORDS FOR [.discard.unreachable]:
>>> OFFSET           TYPE              VALUE
>>> 0000000000000000 R_PPC64_REL32     .text+0x00000000000003d0
>>>
>>> The problem is that that function has size 0:
>>>
>>> 00000000000003d0 l     F .text    0000000000000000 
>>> qdisc_root_sleeping_lock.part.0
>>>
>>>
>>> And objtool is not prepared for a function with size 0.
>> 
>> annotate_unreachable() seems to have been introduced in commit 
>> 649ea4d5a624f0 ("objtool: Assume unannotated UD2 instructions are dead 
>> ends").
>> 
>> Objtool considers 'ud2' instruction to be fatal, so BUG() has 
>> __builtin_unreachable(), rather than unreachable(). See commit 
>> bfb1a7c91fb775 ("x86/bug: Merge annotate_reachable() into _BUG_FLAGS() 
>> asm"). For the same reason, __WARN_FLAGS() is annotated with 
>> _ASM_REACHABLE so that objtool can differentiate warnings from a BUG().
>> 
>> On powerpc, we use trap variants for both and don't have a special 
>> instruction for a BUG(). As such, for _WARN_FLAGS(), using 
>> __builtin_unreachable() suffices to achieve optimal code generation from 
>> the compiler. Objtool would consider subsequent instructions to be 
>> reachable. For BUG(), we can continue to use unreachable() so that 
>> objtool can differentiate these from traps used in warnings.
> 
> Not sure I understand what you mean.
> 
> __WARN_FLAGS() and BUG() both use 'twui' which is unconditionnal trap, 
> as such both are the same.
> 
> On the other side, WARN_ON() and BUG_ON() use tlbnei which is a 
> conditionnel trap.

Objtool classifies 'ud2' as INSN_BUG, and 'int3' as INSN_TRAP. In x86 
BUG(), there is no need for an annotation since objtool assumes that 
'ud2' terminates control flow. But, for __WARN_FLAGS(), since 'ud2' is 
used, an explicit annotate_reachable() is needed. That's _reachable_, to 
indicate that the control flow can continue with the next instruction.

On powerpc, we should (eventually) classify all trap variants as 
INSN_TRAP. Even in the absence of that classification today, objtool 
assumes that control flow continues with the next instruction. With your 
work to utilize asm goto for __WARN_FLAGS(), with no extra instructions 
being generated, I think it is appropriate to just use 
__builtin_unreachable() and to not use the annotation.

In any case, we are only hitting this since gcc is generating a 'bl' due 
to that annotation. We are not yet enabling full objtool validation on 
powerpc, so I think we can revisit this at that point.

> 
>> 
>>>
>>> The following changes to objtool seem to fix the problem, most warning 
>>> are gone with that change.
>>>
>>> diff --git a/tools/objtool/elf.c b/tools/objtool/elf.c
>>> index 63218f5799c2..37c0a268b7ea 100644
>>> --- a/tools/objtool/elf.c
>>> +++ b/tools/objtool/elf.c
>>> @@ -77,6 +77,8 @@ static int symbol_by_offset(const void *key, const 
>>> struct rb_node *node)
>>>
>>>       if (*o < s->offset)
>>>           return -1;
>>> +    if (*o == s->offset && !s->len)
>>> +        return 0;
>>>       if (*o >= s->offset + s->len)
>>>           return 1;
>>>
>>> @@ -400,7 +402,7 @@ static void elf_add_symbol(struct elf *elf, struct 
>>> symbol *sym)
>>>        * Don't store empty STT_NOTYPE symbols in the rbtree.  They
>>>        * can exist within a function, confusing the sorting.
>>>        */
>>> -    if (!sym->len)
>>> +    if (sym->type == STT_NOTYPE && !sym->len)
>>>           rb_erase(&sym->node, &sym->sec->symbol_tree);
>>>   }
>> 
>> Is there a reason to do this, rather than change __WARN_FLAGS() to use 
>> __builtin_unreachable()? Or, are you seeing an issue with unreachable() 
>> elsewhere in the kernel?
>> 
> 
> At the moment I'm trying to understand what the issue is, and explore 
> possible fixes. I guess if we tell objtool that after 'twui' subsequent 
> instructions are unreachable, then __builtin_unreachable() is enough.

Yes, see my explanation above. Since no 'bl' is emitted with the 
builtin, objtool won't complain, especially for mcount.

> 
> I think we should also understand why annotate_unreachable() gives us a 
> so bad result and see if it can be changed to something cleaner than a 
> 'bl' to an empty function that has no instructions.

Indeed. Not really sure. annotate_unreachable() wants to take the 
address of the instruction after the trap. But, in reality, due to use 
of asm goto for __WARN_FLAGS, no instructions would be generated. I 
wonder if that combination causes such code to be emitted.


- Naveen



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