The kernel test robot is reporting truncation warnings when building
lib/test_scanf.c:
1) lib/test_scanf.c:250:9: sparse: sparse: cast truncates bits from
constant value (ffff0001 becomes 1)
Reported on several lines.
2) include/linux/prandom.h:114:45: sparse: sparse: cast truncates bits
from constant value (4f2e5357408c3c09 becomes 408c3c09)
(1) is caused by test_scanf.c using type_min() on an unsigned type. The
type_min() macro calculates -type_max() - 1, so is only meaningful for
signed types.
(2) is caused by prandom_seed_state() storing a modified u64 seed value
into a u32 - sparse will warn that this causes a truncation.
The two patches in this series fix these problems.
Richard Fitzgerald (2):
lib: test_scanf: Fix incorrect use of type_min() with unsigned types
random32: Fix implicit truncation warning in prandom_seed_state()
include/linux/prandom.h | 2 +-
lib/test_scanf.c | 13 ++++++-------
2 files changed, 7 insertions(+), 8 deletions(-)
--
2.20.1
sparse generates the following warning:
include/linux/prandom.h:114:45: sparse: sparse: cast truncates bits from
constant value
This is because the 64-bit seed value is manipulated and then placed in a
u32, causing an implicit cast and truncation. A forced cast to u32 doesn't
prevent this warning, which is reasonable because a typecast doesn't prove
that truncation was expected.
Logical-AND the value with 0xffffffff to make explicit that truncation to
32-bit is intended.
Reported-by: kernel test robot <[email protected]>
Signed-off-by: Richard Fitzgerald <[email protected]>
---
include/linux/prandom.h | 2 +-
1 file changed, 1 insertion(+), 1 deletion(-)
diff --git a/include/linux/prandom.h b/include/linux/prandom.h
index bbf4b4ad61df..056d31317e49 100644
--- a/include/linux/prandom.h
+++ b/include/linux/prandom.h
@@ -111,7 +111,7 @@ static inline u32 __seed(u32 x, u32 m)
*/
static inline void prandom_seed_state(struct rnd_state *state, u64 seed)
{
- u32 i = (seed >> 32) ^ (seed << 10) ^ seed;
+ u32 i = ((seed >> 32) ^ (seed << 10) ^ seed) & 0xffffffffUL;
state->s1 = __seed(i, 2U);
state->s2 = __seed(i, 8U);
--
2.20.1
sparse was producing warnings of the form:
sparse: cast truncates bits from constant value (ffff0001 becomes 1)
The problem was that value_representable_in_type() compared unsigned types
against type_min(). But type_min() is only valid for signed types because
it is calculating the value -type_max() - 1. The minimum value of an
unsigned is obviously 0, so only type_max() need be tested.
This patch also takes the opportunity to clean up the implementation of
simple_numbers_loop() to use a common pattern for the positive and
negative test.
Reported-by: kernel test robot <[email protected]>
Fixes: 17aadada455d ("lib: test_scanf: Add tests for sscanf number conversion")
Signed-off-by: Richard Fitzgerald <[email protected]>
---
lib/test_scanf.c | 13 ++++++-------
1 file changed, 6 insertions(+), 7 deletions(-)
diff --git a/lib/test_scanf.c b/lib/test_scanf.c
index 8d577aec6c28..48ff5747a4da 100644
--- a/lib/test_scanf.c
+++ b/lib/test_scanf.c
@@ -187,8 +187,8 @@ static const unsigned long long numbers[] __initconst = {
#define value_representable_in_type(T, val) \
(is_signed_type(T) \
? ((long long)(val) >= type_min(T)) && ((long long)(val) <= type_max(T)) \
- : ((unsigned long long)(val) >= type_min(T)) && \
- ((unsigned long long)(val) <= type_max(T)))
+ : ((unsigned long long)(val) <= type_max(T)))
+
#define test_one_number(T, gen_fmt, scan_fmt, val, fn) \
do { \
@@ -204,12 +204,11 @@ do { \
int i; \
\
for (i = 0; i < ARRAY_SIZE(numbers); i++) { \
- if (!value_representable_in_type(T, numbers[i])) \
- continue; \
- \
- test_one_number(T, gen_fmt, scan_fmt, numbers[i], fn); \
+ if (value_representable_in_type(T, numbers[i])) \
+ test_one_number(T, gen_fmt, scan_fmt, \
+ numbers[i], fn); \
\
- if (is_signed_type(T)) \
+ if (value_representable_in_type(T, -numbers[i])) \
test_one_number(T, gen_fmt, scan_fmt, \
-numbers[i], fn); \
} \
--
2.20.1
On Mon 2021-05-24 16:59:39, Richard Fitzgerald wrote:
> The kernel test robot is reporting truncation warnings when building
> lib/test_scanf.c:
>
> Richard Fitzgerald (2):
> lib: test_scanf: Fix incorrect use of type_min() with unsigned types
> random32: Fix implicit truncation warning in prandom_seed_state()
>
> include/linux/prandom.h | 2 +-
> lib/test_scanf.c | 13 ++++++-------
> 2 files changed, 7 insertions(+), 8 deletions(-)
For both patches:
Reviewed-by: Petr Mladek <[email protected]>
I am going to commit them within next two days or so unless anyone
complains in the meantime.
Thanks a lot for fixing it.
Best Regards,
Petr
On 24/05/2021 17.59, Richard Fitzgerald wrote:
> sparse was producing warnings of the form:
>
> sparse: cast truncates bits from constant value (ffff0001 becomes 1)
>
> The problem was that value_representable_in_type() compared unsigned types
> against type_min(). But type_min() is only valid for signed types because
> it is calculating the value -type_max() - 1.
... and casts that to (T), so it does produce 0 as it should. E.g. for
T==unsigned char, we get
#define type_min(T) ((T)((T)-type_max(T)-(T)1))
(T)((T)-255 - (T)1)
(T)(-256)
which is 0 of type unsigned char.
The minimum value of an
> unsigned is obviously 0, so only type_max() need be tested.
That part is true.
But type_min and type_max have been carefully created to produce values
of the appropriate type that actually represent the minimum/maximum
representable in that type, without invoking UB. If this program doesn't
produce the expected results for you, I'd be very interested in knowing
your compiler version:
#include <stdio.h>
#define is_signed_type(type) (((type)(-1)) < (type)1)
#define __type_half_max(type) ((type)1 << (8*sizeof(type) - 1 -
is_signed_type(type)))
#define type_max(T) ((T)((__type_half_max(T) - 1) + __type_half_max(T)))
#define type_min(T) ((T)((T)-type_max(T)-(T)1))
int main(int argc, char *argv[])
{
#define p(T, PT, fmt) do { \
PT vmin = type_min(T); \
PT vmax = type_max(T); \
printf("min(%s) = "fmt", max(%s) = "fmt"\n",#T, vmin, #T, vmax); \
} while (0)
p(_Bool, int, "%d");
p(unsigned char, int, "%d");
p(signed char, int, "%d");
p(unsigned int, unsigned int, "%u");
p(unsigned long long, unsigned long long, "%llu");
p(signed long long, signed long long, "%lld");
return 0;
}
> lib/test_scanf.c | 13 ++++++-------
> 1 file changed, 6 insertions(+), 7 deletions(-)
>
> diff --git a/lib/test_scanf.c b/lib/test_scanf.c
> index 8d577aec6c28..48ff5747a4da 100644
> --- a/lib/test_scanf.c
> +++ b/lib/test_scanf.c
> @@ -187,8 +187,8 @@ static const unsigned long long numbers[] __initconst = {
> #define value_representable_in_type(T, val) \
> (is_signed_type(T) \
> ? ((long long)(val) >= type_min(T)) && ((long long)(val) <= type_max(T)) \
> - : ((unsigned long long)(val) >= type_min(T)) && \
> - ((unsigned long long)(val) <= type_max(T)))
> + : ((unsigned long long)(val) <= type_max(T)))
With or without this, these tests are tautological when T is "long long"
or "unsigned long long". I don't know if that is intended. But it won't,
say, exclude ~0ULL if that is in the numbers[] array from being treated
as fitting in a "long long".
Rasmus
On 25/05/2021 10:55, Rasmus Villemoes wrote:
> On 24/05/2021 17.59, Richard Fitzgerald wrote:
>> sparse was producing warnings of the form:
>>
>> sparse: cast truncates bits from constant value (ffff0001 becomes 1)
>>
>> The problem was that value_representable_in_type() compared unsigned types
>> against type_min(). But type_min() is only valid for signed types because
>> it is calculating the value -type_max() - 1.
Ok, I see I was wrong about that. It does in fact work safely. Do you
want me to update the commit message to remove this?
>
> ... and casts that to (T), so it does produce 0 as it should. E.g. for
> T==unsigned char, we get
>
> #define type_min(T) ((T)((T)-type_max(T)-(T)1))
> (T)((T)-255 - (T)1)
> (T)(-256)
>
sparse warns about those truncating casts.
> which is 0 of type unsigned char.
>
> The minimum value of an
>> unsigned is obviously 0, so only type_max() need be tested.
>
> That part is true.
>
> But type_min and type_max have been carefully created to produce values
> of the appropriate type that actually represent the minimum/maximum
> representable in that type, without invoking UB. If this program doesn't
> produce the expected results for you, I'd be very interested in knowing
> your compiler version:
>
From the kernel test robot report:
compiler: m68k-linux-gcc (GCC) 9.3.0
reproduce:
wget
https://raw.githubusercontent.com/intel/lkp-tests/master/sbin/make.cross
-O ~/bin/make.cross
chmod +x ~/bin/make.cross
# apt-get install sparse
# sparse version: v0.6.3-341-g8af24329-dirty
#
https://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/next/linux-next.git/commit/?id=50f530e176eac808e64416732e54c0686ce2c39b
git remote add linux-next
https://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/next/linux-next.git
git fetch --no-tags linux-next master
git checkout 50f530e176eac808e64416732e54c0686ce2c39b
# save the attached .config to linux build tree
COMPILER_INSTALL_PATH=$HOME/0day COMPILER=gcc-9.3.0 make.cro
I get the same warnings with Linaro GCC 7.5-2019.12) and sparse
v0.6.3-184-g1b896707.
> #include <stdio.h>
>
> #define is_signed_type(type) (((type)(-1)) < (type)1)
> #define __type_half_max(type) ((type)1 << (8*sizeof(type) - 1 -
> is_signed_type(type)))
> #define type_max(T) ((T)((__type_half_max(T) - 1) + __type_half_max(T)))
> #define type_min(T) ((T)((T)-type_max(T)-(T)1))
>
> int main(int argc, char *argv[])
> {
> #define p(T, PT, fmt) do { \
> PT vmin = type_min(T); \
> PT vmax = type_max(T); \
> printf("min(%s) = "fmt", max(%s) = "fmt"\n",#T, vmin, #T, vmax); \
> } while (0)
>
> p(_Bool, int, "%d");
> p(unsigned char, int, "%d");
> p(signed char, int, "%d");
> p(unsigned int, unsigned int, "%u");
> p(unsigned long long, unsigned long long, "%llu");
> p(signed long long, signed long long, "%lld");
>
> return 0;
> }
>
>
>
>> lib/test_scanf.c | 13 ++++++-------
>> 1 file changed, 6 insertions(+), 7 deletions(-)
>>
>> diff --git a/lib/test_scanf.c b/lib/test_scanf.c
>> index 8d577aec6c28..48ff5747a4da 100644
>> --- a/lib/test_scanf.c
>> +++ b/lib/test_scanf.c
>> @@ -187,8 +187,8 @@ static const unsigned long long numbers[] __initconst = {
>> #define value_representable_in_type(T, val) \
>> (is_signed_type(T) \
>> ? ((long long)(val) >= type_min(T)) && ((long long)(val) <= type_max(T)) \
>> - : ((unsigned long long)(val) >= type_min(T)) && \
>> - ((unsigned long long)(val) <= type_max(T)))
>> + : ((unsigned long long)(val) <= type_max(T)))
>
>
> With or without this, these tests are tautological when T is "long long"
> or "unsigned long long". I don't know if that is intended. But it won't,
> say, exclude ~0ULL if that is in the numbers[] array from being treated
> as fitting in a "long long".
I don't entirely understand your comment. But the point of the test is
to exclude values that can't be represented by a type shorter than
long long or unsigned long long.
>
> Rasmus
>
On 25/05/2021 12.10, Richard Fitzgerald wrote:
> On 25/05/2021 10:55, Rasmus Villemoes wrote:
>> On 24/05/2021 17.59, Richard Fitzgerald wrote:
>>> sparse was producing warnings of the form:
>>>
>>> ? sparse: cast truncates bits from constant value (ffff0001 becomes 1)
>>>
>>> The problem was that value_representable_in_type() compared unsigned
>>> types
>>> against type_min(). But type_min() is only valid for signed types
>>> because
>>> it is calculating the value -type_max() - 1.
>
> Ok, I see I was wrong about that. It does in fact work safely. Do you
> want me to update the commit message to remove this?
Well, it was the "is only valid for signed types" I reacted to, so yes,
please reword.
>> ... and casts that to (T), so it does produce 0 as it should. E.g. for
>> T==unsigned char, we get
>>
>> #define type_min(T) ((T)((T)-type_max(T)-(T)1))
>> (T)((T)-255 - (T)1)
>> (T)(-256)
>>
>
> sparse warns about those truncating casts.
That's sad. As the comments and commit log indicate, I was very careful
to avoid gcc complaining, even with various -Wfoo that are not normally
enabled in a kernel build. I think sparse is wrong here. Cc += Luc.
>>> diff --git a/lib/test_scanf.c b/lib/test_scanf.c
>>> index 8d577aec6c28..48ff5747a4da 100644
>>> --- a/lib/test_scanf.c
>>> +++ b/lib/test_scanf.c
>>> @@ -187,8 +187,8 @@ static const unsigned long long numbers[]
>>> __initconst = {
>>> ? #define value_representable_in_type(T, val)???????????????????? \
>>> ? (is_signed_type(T)???????????????????????????????? \
>>> ????? ? ((long long)(val) >= type_min(T)) && ((long long)(val) <=
>>> type_max(T)) \
>>> -??? : ((unsigned long long)(val) >= type_min(T)) &&???????????????? \
>>> -????? ((unsigned long long)(val) <= type_max(T)))
>>> +??? : ((unsigned long long)(val) <= type_max(T)))
>>
>>
>> With or without this, these tests are tautological when T is "long long"
>> or "unsigned long long". I don't know if that is intended. But it won't,
>> say, exclude ~0ULL if that is in the numbers[] array from being treated
>> as fitting in a "long long".
>
> I don't entirely understand your comment. But the point of the test is
> to exclude values that can't be represented by a type shorter than
> long long or unsigned long long.
Right. But ~0ULL aka 0xffffffffffffffffULL is in that numbers[] array,
and that value cannot be represented in a "long long". Yet the test
still proceeds to do a test with it, AFAICT first sprinting it with
"%lld", then reading it back with "%lld". The first will produce -1,
which of course does fit, and the test case passes. I was just wondering
if this is really intended.
Rasmus
On Tue 2021-05-25 11:20:45, Petr Mladek wrote:
> On Mon 2021-05-24 16:59:39, Richard Fitzgerald wrote:
> > The kernel test robot is reporting truncation warnings when building
> > lib/test_scanf.c:
> >
> > Richard Fitzgerald (2):
> > lib: test_scanf: Fix incorrect use of type_min() with unsigned types
> > random32: Fix implicit truncation warning in prandom_seed_state()
> >
> > include/linux/prandom.h | 2 +-
> > lib/test_scanf.c | 13 ++++++-------
> > 2 files changed, 7 insertions(+), 8 deletions(-)
>
> For both patches:
>
> Reviewed-by: Petr Mladek <[email protected]>
>
> I am going to commit them within next two days or so unless anyone
> complains in the meantime.
JFYI, both patches have been committed into printk/linux.git,
branch for-5.14-vsprintf-scanf.
Best Regards,
Petr
On Tue, May 25, 2021 at 12:30:02PM +0200, Rasmus Villemoes wrote:
> On 25/05/2021 12.10, Richard Fitzgerald wrote:
> > On 25/05/2021 10:55, Rasmus Villemoes wrote:
> >> On 24/05/2021 17.59, Richard Fitzgerald wrote:
> >>> sparse was producing warnings of the form:
> >>>
> >>> ? sparse: cast truncates bits from constant value (ffff0001 becomes 1)
> >>>
> >>> The problem was that value_representable_in_type() compared unsigned
> >>> types
> >>> against type_min(). But type_min() is only valid for signed types
> >>> because
> >>> it is calculating the value -type_max() - 1.
> >
> > Ok, I see I was wrong about that. It does in fact work safely. Do you
> > want me to update the commit message to remove this?
>
> Well, it was the "is only valid for signed types" I reacted to, so yes,
> please reword.
>
> >> ... and casts that to (T), so it does produce 0 as it should. E.g. for
> >> T==unsigned char, we get
> >>
> >> #define type_min(T) ((T)((T)-type_max(T)-(T)1))
> >> (T)((T)-255 - (T)1)
> >> (T)(-256)
> >>
> >
> > sparse warns about those truncating casts.
>
> That's sad. As the comments and commit log indicate, I was very careful
> to avoid gcc complaining, even with various -Wfoo that are not normally
> enabled in a kernel build. I think sparse is wrong here. Cc += Luc.
Well, there is a cast and it effectively truncates the upper bits
of the constant, so sparse is kinda right but ... months ago I once
investigated these warnings and in all cases but one the use of the
cast was legit. Most of them was for:
1) a 32-bit constant that was (via some macro) split as two 16-bit
constants which were then written to some 16-bit HW registers.
The problem would not happen if the macro would use a AND mask
instead of a cast but it seems that people tend to refer the cast,
I think it's the wrong choice but eh.
2) some generic macro that do things like:
#define macro(size, value) \
switch (size) {
case 1:
... (u8) value;
case 2:
... (u16) value;
...
x = macro(sizeof(int), 0xffff0001);
So, each time the macro is used for 32-bit, the code still contains
a cast of the value to some smaller type, even if all uses are OK.
The problem here is that these warnings are issued by sparse well
before it can know that the code is dead and when it know it, these
casts are already eliminated.
I'm sure this warning can sometimes catch a real problem but most of
the time it's not, just false warnings.
I think it would be best to disable this warning by default, but IIRC
this has already be discussed (years ago) and there was some opposition.
Maybe enabling it only at W=2 or something. I dunno.
-- Luc