Fix the following sparse warnings:
scripts/kallsyms.c:65:5: warning: symbol 'token_profit' was not declared. Should it be static?
scripts/kallsyms.c:68:15: warning: symbol 'best_table' was not declared. Should it be static?
scripts/kallsyms.c:69:15: warning: symbol 'best_table_len' was not declared. Should it be static?
Also, remove 'inline' from is_arm_mapping_symbol(). The compiler
will inline it anyway when it is appropriate to do so.
Signed-off-by: Masahiro Yamada <yamada.masahiro@socionext.com>
The newer prlimit64 syscall provides all the functionality of getrlimit
and setrlimit syscalls and adds the pid of target process, so future
architectures won't need to include getrlimit and setrlimit.
Therefore drop getrlimit and setrlimit syscalls from the generic syscall
list unless __ARCH_WANT_SET_GET_RLIMIT is defined by the architecture's
unistd.h prior to including asm-generic/unistd.h, and adjust all
architectures using the generic syscall list to define it so that no
in-tree architectures are affected.
Cc: Arnd Bergmann <arnd@arndb.de>
Cc: linux-arch@vger.kernel.org
Cc: linux-arm-kernel@lists.infradead.org
Cc: linux-hexagon@vger.kernel.org
Cc: uclinux-h8-devel@lists.sourceforge.jp
Signed-off-by: Yury Norov <ynorov@caviumnetworks.com>
Acked-by: Arnd Bergmann <arnd@arndb.de>
Acked-by: Mark Salter <msalter@redhat.com> [c6x]
Acked-by: James Hogan <james.hogan@imgtec.com> [metag]
Acked-by: Ley Foon Tan <lftan@altera.com> [nios2]
Acked-by: Stafford Horne <shorne@gmail.com> [openrisc]
Acked-by: Will Deacon <will.deacon@arm.com> [arm64]
Acked-by: Vineet Gupta <vgupta@synopsys.com> #arch/arc bits
Signed-off-by: Yury Norov <ynorov@marvell.com>
Signed-off-by: Arnd Bergmann <arnd@arndb.de>
We currently check the atomic headers at build-time to ensure they
haven't been modified directly, and these checks require regenerating
the headers in full. As this takes a few seconds, even when
parallelized, this is too slow to run for every kernel build.
Instead, we can generate a hash of each header as we generate them,
which we can cheaply check at build time (~0.16s for all headers).
This patch does so, updating headers with their hashes using the new
gen-atomics.sh script. As some users apparently build the kernel wihout
coreutils, lacking sha1sum, the checks are skipped in this case.
Presumably, most developers have a working coreutils installation.
Signed-off-by: Mark Rutland <mark.rutland@arm.com>
Acked-by: Will Deacon <will.deacon@arm.com>
Cc: Andrew Morton <akpm@linux-foundation.org>
Cc: Boqun Feng <boqun.feng@gmail.com>
Cc: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@linux-foundation.org>
Cc: Peter Zijlstra <peterz@infradead.org>
Cc: Thomas Gleixner <tglx@linutronix.de>
Cc: anders.roxell@linaro.org
Cc: linux-kernel@vger.kernel.rg
Cc: naresh.kamboju@linaro.org
Signed-off-by: Ingo Molnar <mingo@kernel.org>
Some distibutions and build systems doesn't include 'fold' from
coreutils default.
.../scripts/atomic/atomic-tbl.sh: line 183: fold: command not found
Rework to use 'grep' instead of 'fold' to use a dependency that is
already used a lot in the kernel.
[Mark: rework commit message]
Suggested-by: Will Deacon <will.deacon@arm.com>
Reported-by: Naresh Kamboju <naresh.kamboju@linaro.org>
Signed-off-by: Anders Roxell <anders.roxell@linaro.org>
Signed-off-by: Mark Rutland <mark.rutland@arm.com>
Acked-by: Will Deacon <will.deacon@arm.com>
Cc: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@linux-foundation.org>
Cc: Peter Zijlstra <peterz@infradead.org>
Cc: Thomas Gleixner <tglx@linutronix.de>
Cc: akpm@linux-foundation.org
Cc: boqun.feng@gmail.com
Cc: linux-kernel@vger.kernel.rg
Signed-off-by: Ingo Molnar <mingo@kernel.org>
This series finally gets us to the point of having system calls with
64-bit time_t on all architectures, after a long time of incremental
preparation patches.
There was actually one conversion that I missed during the summer,
i.e. Deepa's timex series, which I now updated based the 5.0-rc1 changes
and review comments.
The following system calls are now added on all 32-bit architectures
using the same system call numbers:
403 clock_gettime64
404 clock_settime64
405 clock_adjtime64
406 clock_getres_time64
407 clock_nanosleep_time64
408 timer_gettime64
409 timer_settime64
410 timerfd_gettime64
411 timerfd_settime64
412 utimensat_time64
413 pselect6_time64
414 ppoll_time64
416 io_pgetevents_time64
417 recvmmsg_time64
418 mq_timedsend_time64
419 mq_timedreceiv_time64
420 semtimedop_time64
421 rt_sigtimedwait_time64
422 futex_time64
423 sched_rr_get_interval_time64
Each one of these corresponds directly to an existing system call
that includes a 'struct timespec' argument, or a structure containing
a timespec or (in case of clock_adjtime) timeval. Not included here
are new versions of getitimer/setitimer and getrusage/waitid, which
are planned for the future but only needed to make a consistent API
rather than for correct operation beyond y2038. These four system
calls are based on 'timeval', and it has not been finally decided
what the replacement kernel interface will use instead.
So far, I have done a lot of build testing across most architectures,
which has found a number of bugs. Runtime testing so far included
testing LTP on 32-bit ARM with the existing system calls, to ensure
we do not regress for existing binaries, and a test with a 32-bit
x86 build of LTP against a modified version of the musl C library
that has been adapted to the new system call interface [3].
This library can be used for testing on all architectures supported
by musl-1.1.21, but it is not how the support is getting integrated
into the official musl release. Official musl support is planned
but will require more invasive changes to the library.
Link: https://lore.kernel.org/lkml/20190110162435.309262-1-arnd@arndb.de/T/
Link: https://lore.kernel.org/lkml/20190118161835.2259170-1-arnd@arndb.de/
Link: https://git.linaro.org/people/arnd/musl-y2038.git/ [2]
Signed-off-by: Arnd Bergmann <arnd@arndb.de>
-----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE-----
Version: GnuPG v2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=IZVb
-----END PGP SIGNATURE-----
Merge tag 'y2038-new-syscalls' of git://git.kernel.org:/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/arnd/playground into timers/2038
Pull y2038 - time64 system calls from Arnd Bergmann:
This series finally gets us to the point of having system calls with 64-bit
time_t on all architectures, after a long time of incremental preparation
patches.
There was actually one conversion that I missed during the summer,
i.e. Deepa's timex series, which I now updated based the 5.0-rc1 changes
and review comments.
The following system calls are now added on all 32-bit architectures using
the same system call numbers:
403 clock_gettime64
404 clock_settime64
405 clock_adjtime64
406 clock_getres_time64
407 clock_nanosleep_time64
408 timer_gettime64
409 timer_settime64
410 timerfd_gettime64
411 timerfd_settime64
412 utimensat_time64
413 pselect6_time64
414 ppoll_time64
416 io_pgetevents_time64
417 recvmmsg_time64
418 mq_timedsend_time64
419 mq_timedreceiv_time64
420 semtimedop_time64
421 rt_sigtimedwait_time64
422 futex_time64
423 sched_rr_get_interval_time64
Each one of these corresponds directly to an existing system call that
includes a 'struct timespec' argument, or a structure containing a timespec
or (in case of clock_adjtime) timeval. Not included here are new versions
of getitimer/setitimer and getrusage/waitid, which are planned for the
future but only needed to make a consistent API rather than for correct
operation beyond y2038. These four system calls are based on 'timeval', and
it has not been finally decided what the replacement kernel interface will
use instead.
So far, I have done a lot of build testing across most architectures, which
has found a number of bugs. Runtime testing so far included testing LTP on
32-bit ARM with the existing system calls, to ensure we do not regress for
existing binaries, and a test with a 32-bit x86 build of LTP against a
modified version of the musl C library that has been adapted to the new
system call interface [3]. This library can be used for testing on all
architectures supported by musl-1.1.21, but it is not how the support is
getting integrated into the official musl release. Official musl support is
planned but will require more invasive changes to the library.
Link: https://lore.kernel.org/lkml/20190110162435.309262-1-arnd@arndb.de/T/
Link: https://lore.kernel.org/lkml/20190118161835.2259170-1-arnd@arndb.de/
Link: https://git.linaro.org/people/arnd/musl-y2038.git/ [2]
This adds 21 new system calls on each ABI that has 32-bit time_t
today. All of these have the exact same semantics as their existing
counterparts, and the new ones all have macro names that end in 'time64'
for clarification.
This gets us to the point of being able to safely use a C library
that has 64-bit time_t in user space. There are still a couple of
loose ends to tie up in various areas of the code, but this is the
big one, and should be entirely uncontroversial at this point.
In particular, there are four system calls (getitimer, setitimer,
waitid, and getrusage) that don't have a 64-bit counterpart yet,
but these can all be safely implemented in the C library by wrapping
around the existing system calls because the 32-bit time_t they
pass only counts elapsed time, not time since the epoch. They
will be dealt with later.
Signed-off-by: Arnd Bergmann <arnd@arndb.de>
Acked-by: Heiko Carstens <heiko.carstens@de.ibm.com>
Acked-by: Geert Uytterhoeven <geert@linux-m68k.org>
Acked-by: Catalin Marinas <catalin.marinas@arm.com>
Introduce a generic TEE bus driver concept for TEE based kernel drivers
which would like to communicate with TEE based devices/services. Also
add support in module device table for these new TEE based devices.
In this TEE bus concept, devices/services are identified via Universally
Unique Identifier (UUID) and drivers register a table of device UUIDs
which they can support.
So this TEE bus framework registers following apis:
- match(): Iterates over the driver UUID table to find a corresponding
match for device UUID. If a match is found, then this particular device
is probed via corresponding probe api registered by the driver. This
process happens whenever a device or a driver is registered with TEE
bus.
- uevent(): Notifies user-space (udev) whenever a new device is registered
on this bus for auto-loading of modularized drivers.
Also this framework allows for device enumeration to be specific to
corresponding TEE implementation like OP-TEE etc.
Signed-off-by: Sumit Garg <sumit.garg@linaro.org>
Reviewed-by: Daniel Thompson <daniel.thompson@linaro.org>
Reviewed-by: Bhupesh Sharma <bhsharma@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Jens Wiklander <jens.wiklander@linaro.org>
The commands surrounded by ( ) are executed in a subshell, but in
most cases, we do not need to spawn an extra subshell.
Signed-off-by: Masahiro Yamada <yamada.masahiro@socionext.com>
In Kbuild, if_changed and friends must have FORCE as a prerequisite.
Hence, $(filter-out FORCE,$^) or $(filter-out $(PHONY),$^) is a common
idiom to get the names of all the prerequisites except phony targets.
Add real-prereqs as a shorthand.
Note:
We cannot replace $(filter %.o,$^) in cmd_link_multi-m because $^ may
include auto-generated dependencies from the .*.cmd file when a single
object module is changed into a multi object module. Refer to commit
69ea912fda ("kbuild: remove unneeded link_multi_deps"). I added some
comment to avoid accidental breakage.
Signed-off-by: Masahiro Yamada <yamada.masahiro@socionext.com>
Acked-by: Rob Herring <robh@kernel.org>
All the callers of size_append pass $(filter-out FORCE,$^).
Move $(filter-out FORCE,$^) to the definition of size_append.
This makes the callers cleaner because $(call ...) is unneeded
for a macro with no argument.
Signed-off-by: Masahiro Yamada <yamada.masahiro@socionext.com>
The top Makefile does not need to export KBUILD_VMLINUX_INIT and
KBUILD_VMLINUX_MAIN separately.
Put every built-in.a into KBUILD_VMLINUX_OBJS. The order of
$(head-y), $(init-y), $(core-y), ... is still retained.
Signed-off-by: Masahiro Yamada <yamada.masahiro@socionext.com>
The symbol table in the final archive is unneeded; the linker does not
require the symbol table after the --whole-archive option. Every object
file in the archive is included in the link anyway.
Pass thin archives from subdirectories directly to the linker, and
remove the final archiving step.
Fix up the document and comments as well.
Signed-off-by: Masahiro Yamada <yamada.masahiro@socionext.com>
Acked-by: Nicholas Piggin <npiggin@gmail.com>
When building an external module, $(obj) is the absolute path to it.
The header search paths from ccflags-y etc. should not be tweaked.
Signed-off-by: Masahiro Yamada <yamada.masahiro@socionext.com>
The regular expression that matches the version number of a utility
being queried is used as a constant expression in the current
implementation. Assigning the RE in question to a variable gives it a
meaningful name that clearly expresses the intended use of the expression
without having to think about the details of implementation.
Signed-off-by: Alexander Kapshuk <alexander.kapshuk@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@linuxfoundation.org>
There has been some confusion since checkpatch started warning about bool
use in structures, and people have been avoiding using it.
Many people feel there is still a legitimate place for bool in structures,
so provide some guidance on bool usage derived from the entire thread that
spawned the checkpatch warning.
Link: https://lkml.kernel.org/r/CA+55aFwVZk1OfB9T2v014PTAKFhtVan_Zj2dOjnCy3x6E4UJfA@mail.gmail.com
Signed-off-by: Joe Perches <joe@perches.com>
Acked-by: Joe Perches <joe@perches.com>
Reviewed-by: Bart Van Assche <bvanassche@acm.org>
Acked-by: Jani Nikula <jani.nikula@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Joey Pabalinas <joeypabalinas@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Jason Gunthorpe <jgg@mellanox.com>
Signed-off-by: Jonathan Corbet <corbet@lwn.net>
GCC 9 reworks the way the references to the stack canary are
emitted, to prevent the value from being spilled to the stack
before the final comparison in the epilogue, defeating the
purpose, given that the spill slot is under control of the
attacker that we are protecting ourselves from.
Since our canary value address is obtained without accessing
memory (as opposed to pre-v7 code that will obtain it from a
literal pool), it is unlikely (although not guaranteed) that
the compiler will spill the canary value in the same way, so
let's just disable this improvement when building with GCC9+.
Signed-off-by: Ard Biesheuvel <ard.biesheuvel@linaro.org>
Signed-off-by: Kees Cook <keescook@chromium.org>
The ARM per-task stack protector GCC plugin hits an assert in
the compiler in some case, due to the fact the the SP mask
expression is not sign-extended as it should be. So fix that.
Suggested-by: Kugan Vivekanandarajah <kugan.vivekanandarajah@linaro.org>
Signed-off-by: Ard Biesheuvel <ard.biesheuvel@linaro.org>
Signed-off-by: Kees Cook <keescook@chromium.org>
The ability to add kerneldoc comments for fields in embedded structures is
useful, but it brought along a whole bunch of warnings for fields that
could not be described before. In many cases, there's little value in
adding docs for these nested fields, and in cases like:
struct a {
struct b {
int c;
} d, e;
};
"c" would have to be described twice (as d.c and e.c) to make the warnings
go away.
We can no doubt do something smarter, but simply suppressing the warnings
for this case removes about 70 warnings from the docs build, freeing us to
focus on the ones that matter more. So make kerneldoc be silent about
missing descriptions for any field containing a ".".
Signed-off-by: Jonathan Corbet <corbet@lwn.net>
The SuperH boot code files use a magic format for the SPDX identifier
comment:
LIST "SPDX-License-Identifier: .... "
The trailing quotation mark is not stripped before the token parser is
invoked and causes the scan to fail. Handle it gracefully.
Fixes: 6a0abce4c4 ("sh: include: convert to SPDX identifiers")
Signed-off-by: Thomas Gleixner <tglx@linutronix.de>
Cc: Kuninori Morimoto <kuninori.morimoto.gx@renesas.com>
Cc: Simon Horman <horms+renesas@verge.net.au>
Cc: Yoshinori Sato <ysato@users.sourceforge.jp>
Cc: Rich Felker <dalias@libc.org>
Cc: Andrew Morton <akpm@linux-foundation.org>
Cc: Kate Stewart <kstewart@linuxfoundation.org>
Reviewed-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@linuxfoundation.org>
Signed-off-by: Jonathan Corbet <corbet@lwn.net>
Commit eea199b445 ("kbuild: remove unnecessary LEX_PREFIX and
YACC_PREFIX") removed the last users of this macro.
Signed-off-by: Masahiro Yamada <yamada.masahiro@socionext.com>
I accidentally dropped '*' in the previous renaming patch.
Revive it so that 'make mrproper' can clean the generated files.
Fixes: d86271af64 ("kconfig: rename generated .*conf-cfg to *conf-cfg")
Signed-off-by: Masahiro Yamada <yamada.masahiro@socionext.com>
We've always had a weird situation around dma_zalloc_coherent. To
safely support mapping the allocations to userspace major architectures
like x86 and arm have always zeroed allocations from dma_alloc_coherent,
but a couple other architectures were missing that zeroing either always
or in corner cases. Then later we grew anothe dma_zalloc_coherent
interface to explicitly request zeroing, but that just added __GFP_ZERO
to the allocation flags, which for some allocators that didn't end
up using the page allocator ended up being a no-op and still not
zeroing the allocations.
So for this merge window I fixed up all remaining architectures to zero
the memory in dma_alloc_coherent, and made dma_zalloc_coherent a no-op
wrapper around dma_alloc_coherent, which fixes all of the above issues.
dma_zalloc_coherent is now pointless and can go away, and Luis helped
me writing a cocchinelle script and patch series to kill it, which I
think we should apply now just after -rc1 to finally settle these
issue.
-----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE-----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=VIBB
-----END PGP SIGNATURE-----
Merge tag 'remove-dma_zalloc_coherent-5.0' of git://git.infradead.org/users/hch/dma-mapping
Pull dma_zalloc_coherent() removal from Christoph Hellwig:
"We've always had a weird situation around dma_zalloc_coherent. To
safely support mapping the allocations to userspace major
architectures like x86 and arm have always zeroed allocations from
dma_alloc_coherent, but a couple other architectures were missing that
zeroing either always or in corner cases.
Then later we grew anothe dma_zalloc_coherent interface to explicitly
request zeroing, but that just added __GFP_ZERO to the allocation
flags, which for some allocators that didn't end up using the page
allocator ended up being a no-op and still not zeroing the
allocations.
So for this merge window I fixed up all remaining architectures to
zero the memory in dma_alloc_coherent, and made dma_zalloc_coherent a
no-op wrapper around dma_alloc_coherent, which fixes all of the above
issues.
dma_zalloc_coherent is now pointless and can go away, and Luis helped
me writing a cocchinelle script and patch series to kill it, which I
think we should apply now just after -rc1 to finally settle these
issue"
* tag 'remove-dma_zalloc_coherent-5.0' of git://git.infradead.org/users/hch/dma-mapping:
dma-mapping: remove dma_zalloc_coherent()
cross-tree: phase out dma_zalloc_coherent() on headers
cross-tree: phase out dma_zalloc_coherent()
dma_zalloc_coherent() is no longer needed as it has no users because
dma_alloc_coherent() already zeroes out memory for us.
The Coccinelle grammar rule that used to check for dma_alloc_coherent()
+ memset() is modified so that it just tells the user that the memset is
not needed anymore.
Suggested-by: Christoph Hellwig <hch@lst.de>
Signed-off-by: Luis Chamberlain <mcgrof@kernel.org>
Signed-off-by: Christoph Hellwig <hch@lst.de>
You do not have to use define ... endef for filechk_* rules.
For simple cases, the use of assignment looks cleaner, IMHO.
I updated the usage for scripts/Kbuild.include in case somebody
misunderstands the 'define ... endif' is the requirement.
Signed-off-by: Masahiro Yamada <yamada.masahiro@socionext.com>
Acked-by: Heiko Carstens <heiko.carstens@de.ibm.com>
Some time ago, Sam pointed out a certain degree of overwrap between
generic-y and mandatory-y. (https://lkml.org/lkml/2017/7/10/121)
I tweaked the meaning of mandatory-y a little bit; now it defines the
minimum set of ASM headers that all architectures must have.
If arch does not have specific implementation of a mandatory header,
Kbuild will let it fallback to the asm-generic one by automatically
generating a wrapper. This will allow to drop lots of redundant
generic-y defines.
Previously, "mandatory" was used in the context of UAPI, but I guess
this can be extended to kernel space ASM headers.
Suggested-by: Sam Ravnborg <sam@ravnborg.org>
Signed-off-by: Masahiro Yamada <yamada.masahiro@socionext.com>
Acked-by: Sam Ravnborg <sam@ravnborg.org>
filechk_* rules often consist of multiple 'echo' lines. They must be
surrounded with { } or ( ) to work correctly. Otherwise, only the
string from the last 'echo' would be written into the target.
Let's take care of that in the 'filechk' in scripts/Kbuild.include
to clean up filechk_* rules.
Signed-off-by: Masahiro Yamada <yamada.masahiro@socionext.com>
Since commit 9c2af1c737 ("kbuild: add .DELETE_ON_ERROR special
target"), the target file is automatically deleted on failure.
The boilerplate code
... || { rm -f $@; false; }
is unneeded.
Signed-off-by: Masahiro Yamada <yamada.masahiro@socionext.com>
Commit 3a2429e1fa ("kbuild: change if_changed_rule for multi-line
recipe") and commit 4f0e3a57d6 ("kbuild: Add support for DT binding
schema checks") came in via different sub-systems.
This is a follow-up cleanup.
Signed-off-by: Masahiro Yamada <yamada.masahiro@socionext.com>
The only/last user of UIMAGE_IN/OUT was removed by commit 4722a3e6b7
("microblaze: fix multiple bugs in arch/microblaze/boot/Makefile").
The input and output should always be $< and $@.
Signed-off-by: Masahiro Yamada <yamada.masahiro@socionext.com>
Currently, CONFIG_JUMP_LABEL just means "I _want_ to use jump label".
The jump label is controlled by HAVE_JUMP_LABEL, which is defined
like this:
#if defined(CC_HAVE_ASM_GOTO) && defined(CONFIG_JUMP_LABEL)
# define HAVE_JUMP_LABEL
#endif
We can improve this by testing 'asm goto' support in Kconfig, then
make JUMP_LABEL depend on CC_HAS_ASM_GOTO.
Ugly #ifdef HAVE_JUMP_LABEL will go away, and CONFIG_JUMP_LABEL will
match to the real kernel capability.
Signed-off-by: Masahiro Yamada <yamada.masahiro@socionext.com>
Acked-by: Michael Ellerman <mpe@ellerman.id.au> (powerpc)
Tested-by: Sedat Dilek <sedat.dilek@gmail.com>
As mentioned in the info pages of gas, the '.align' pseudo op's
interpretation of the alignment value is architecture specific.
It might either be a byte value or taken to the power of two.
On ARM it's actually the latter which leads to unnecessary large
alignments of 16 bytes for 32 bit builds or 256 bytes for 64 bit
builds.
Fix this by switching to '.balign' instead which is consistent
across all architectures.
Signed-off-by: Mathias Krause <minipli@googlemail.com>
Cc: Catalin Marinas <catalin.marinas@arm.com>
Cc: Will Deacon <will.deacon@arm.com>
Signed-off-by: Masahiro Yamada <yamada.masahiro@socionext.com>
Coccinelle doesn't always have access to the values of named
(#define) constants, and they may likely often be bound to true
and false values anyway, resulting in false positives. So stop
warning about them.
Signed-off-by: Julia Lawall <Julia.Lawall@lip6.fr>
Signed-off-by: Masahiro Yamada <yamada.masahiro@socionext.com>
Avoid reporting on the use of an iterator index variable when
the variable is redeclared.
Signed-off-by: Julia Lawall <Julia.Lawall@lip6.fr>
Signed-off-by: Masahiro Yamada <yamada.masahiro@socionext.com>
Pull trivial vfs updates from Al Viro:
"A few cleanups + Neil's namespace_unlock() optimization"
* 'for-linus' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/viro/vfs:
exec: make prepare_bprm_creds static
genheaders: %-<width>s had been there since v6; %-*s - since v7
VFS: use synchronize_rcu_expedited() in namespace_unlock()
iov_iter: reduce code duplication
A bug is present in GDB which causes early string termination when
parsing variables. This has been reported [0], but we should ensure
that we can support at least basic printing of the core kernel strings.
For current gdb version (has been tested with 7.3 and 8.1), 'lx-version'
only prints one character.
(gdb) lx-version
L(gdb)
This can be fixed by casting 'linux_banner' as (char *).
(gdb) lx-version
Linux version 4.19.0-rc1+ (changbin@acer) (gcc version 7.3.0 (Ubuntu 7.3.0-16ubuntu3)) #21 SMP Sat Sep 1 21:43:30 CST 2018
[0] https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=20077
[kbingham@kernel.org: add detail to commit message]
Link: http://lkml.kernel.org/r/20181111162035.8356-1-kieran.bingham@ideasonboard.com
Fixes: 2d061d9994 ("scripts/gdb: add version command")
Signed-off-by: Du Changbin <changbin.du@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Kieran Bingham <kbingham@kernel.org>
Acked-by: Jan Kiszka <jan.kiszka@siemens.com>
Cc: Jan Kiszka <jan.kiszka@siemens.com>
Cc: Jason Wessel <jason.wessel@windriver.com>
Cc: Daniel Thompson <daniel.thompson@linaro.org>
Signed-off-by: Andrew Morton <akpm@linux-foundation.org>
Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@linux-foundation.org>
These declarations should generally be static const to avoid poor
compilation and runtime performance where compilers tend to initialize
the const declaration for every call instead of using .rodata for the
string.
Miscellanea:
- Convert spaces to tabs for indentation in 2 adjacent checks
Link: http://lkml.kernel.org/r/10ea5f4b087dc911e41e187a4a2b5e79c7529aa3.camel@perches.com
Signed-off-by: Joe Perches <joe@perches.com>
Cc: Rasmus Villemoes <linux@rasmusvillemoes.dk>
Signed-off-by: Andrew Morton <akpm@linux-foundation.org>
Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@linux-foundation.org>
- Rework of the kprobe/uprobe and synthetic events to consolidate all
the dynamic event code. This will make changes in the future easier.
- Partial rewrite of the function graph tracing infrastructure.
This will allow for multiple users of hooking onto functions
to get the callback (return) of the function. This is the ground
work for having kprobes and function graph tracer using one code base.
- Clean up of the histogram code that will facilitate adding more
features to the histograms in the future.
- Addition of str_has_prefix() and a few use cases. There currently
is a similar function strstart() that is used in a few places, but
only returns a bool and not a length. These instances will be
removed in the future to use str_has_prefix() instead.
- A few other various clean ups as well.
-----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE-----
iIoEABYIADIWIQRRSw7ePDh/lE+zeZMp5XQQmuv6qgUCXCawlBQccm9zdGVkdEBn
b29kbWlzLm9yZwAKCRAp5XQQmuv6qhbcAQCFeT0fWWTUxofBQz5jqsHaRnVg21+9
X4sTldYRYEn4YgEAmWOyiwq7zvrsAu4ZwkNBMeqxn3tVymYHiGOGe3Y4BAw=
=u96o
-----END PGP SIGNATURE-----
Merge tag 'trace-v4.21' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/rostedt/linux-trace
Pull tracing updates from Steven Rostedt:
- Rework of the kprobe/uprobe and synthetic events to consolidate all
the dynamic event code. This will make changes in the future easier.
- Partial rewrite of the function graph tracing infrastructure. This
will allow for multiple users of hooking onto functions to get the
callback (return) of the function. This is the ground work for having
kprobes and function graph tracer using one code base.
- Clean up of the histogram code that will facilitate adding more
features to the histograms in the future.
- Addition of str_has_prefix() and a few use cases. There currently is
a similar function strstart() that is used in a few places, but only
returns a bool and not a length. These instances will be removed in
the future to use str_has_prefix() instead.
- A few other various clean ups as well.
* tag 'trace-v4.21' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/rostedt/linux-trace: (57 commits)
tracing: Use the return of str_has_prefix() to remove open coded numbers
tracing: Have the historgram use the result of str_has_prefix() for len of prefix
tracing: Use str_has_prefix() instead of using fixed sizes
tracing: Use str_has_prefix() helper for histogram code
string.h: Add str_has_prefix() helper function
tracing: Make function ‘ftrace_exports’ static
tracing: Simplify printf'ing in seq_print_sym
tracing: Avoid -Wformat-nonliteral warning
tracing: Merge seq_print_sym_short() and seq_print_sym_offset()
tracing: Add hist trigger comments for variable-related fields
tracing: Remove hist trigger synth_var_refs
tracing: Use hist trigger's var_ref array to destroy var_refs
tracing: Remove open-coding of hist trigger var_ref management
tracing: Use var_refs[] for hist trigger reference checking
tracing: Change strlen to sizeof for hist trigger static strings
tracing: Remove unnecessary hist trigger struct field
tracing: Fix ftrace_graph_get_ret_stack() to use task and not current
seq_buf: Use size_t for len in seq_buf_puts()
seq_buf: Make seq_buf_puts() null-terminate the buffer
arm64: Use ftrace_graph_get_ret_stack() instead of curr_ret_stack
...
- support -y option for merge_config.sh to avoid downgrading =y to =m
- remove S_OTHER symbol type, and touch include/config/*.h files correctly
- fix file name and line number in lexer warnings
- fix memory leak when EOF is encountered in quotation
- resolve all shift/reduce conflicts of the parser
- warn no new line at end of file
- make 'source' statement more strict to take only string literal
- rewrite the lexer and remove the keyword lookup table
- convert to SPDX License Identifier
- compile C files independently instead of including them from zconf.y
- fix various warnings of gconfig
- misc cleanups
-----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE-----
Version: GnuPG v1
iQIcBAABAgAGBQJcJieuAAoJED2LAQed4NsGHlIP/1s0fQ86XD9dIMyHzAO0gh2f
7rylfe2kEXJgIzJ0DyZdLu4iZtwbkEUqTQrRS1abriNGVemPkfBAnZdM5d92lOQX
3iREa700AJ2xo7V7gYZ6AbhZoG3p0S9U9Q2qE5S+tFTe8c2Gy4xtjnODF+Vel85r
S0P8tF5sE1/d00lm+yfMI/CJVfDjyNaMm+aVEnL0kZTPiRkaktjWgo6Fc2p4z1L5
HFmMMP6/iaXmRZ+tHJGPQ2AT70GFVZw5ePxPcl50EotUP25KHbuUdzs8wDpYm3U/
rcESVsIFpgqHWmTsdBk6dZk0q8yFZNkMlkaP/aYukVZpUn/N6oAXgTFckYl8dmQL
fQBkQi6DTfr9EBPVbj18BKm7xI3Y4DdQ2fzTfYkJ2XwNRGFA5r9N3sjd7ZTVGjxC
aeeMHCwvGdSx1x8PeZAhZfsUHW8xVDMSQiT713+ljBY+6cwzA+2NF0kP7B6OAqwr
ETFzd4Xu2/lZcL7gQRH8WU3L2S5iedmDG6RnZgJMXI0/9V4qAA+nlsWaCgnl1TgA
mpxYlLUMrd6AUJevE34FlnyFdk8IMn9iKRFsvF0f3doO5C7QzTVGqFdJu5a0CuWO
4NBJvZjFT8/4amoWLfnDlfApWXzTfwLbKG+r6V2F30fLuXpYg5LxWhBoGRPYLZSq
oi4xN1Mpx3TvXz6WcKVZ
=r3Fl
-----END PGP SIGNATURE-----
Merge tag 'kconfig-v4.21' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/masahiroy/linux-kbuild
Pull Kconfig updates from Masahiro Yamada:
- support -y option for merge_config.sh to avoid downgrading =y to =m
- remove S_OTHER symbol type, and touch include/config/*.h files correctly
- fix file name and line number in lexer warnings
- fix memory leak when EOF is encountered in quotation
- resolve all shift/reduce conflicts of the parser
- warn no new line at end of file
- make 'source' statement more strict to take only string literal
- rewrite the lexer and remove the keyword lookup table
- convert to SPDX License Identifier
- compile C files independently instead of including them from zconf.y
- fix various warnings of gconfig
- misc cleanups
* tag 'kconfig-v4.21' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/masahiroy/linux-kbuild: (39 commits)
kconfig: surround dbg_sym_flags with #ifdef DEBUG to fix gconf warning
kconfig: split images.c out of qconf.cc/gconf.c to fix gconf warnings
kconfig: add static qualifiers to fix gconf warnings
kconfig: split the lexer out of zconf.y
kconfig: split some C files out of zconf.y
kconfig: convert to SPDX License Identifier
kconfig: remove keyword lookup table entirely
kconfig: update current_pos in the second lexer
kconfig: switch to ASSIGN_VAL state in the second lexer
kconfig: stop associating kconf_id with yylval
kconfig: refactor end token rules
kconfig: stop supporting '.' and '/' in unquoted words
treewide: surround Kconfig file paths with double quotes
microblaze: surround string default in Kconfig with double quotes
kconfig: use T_WORD instead of T_VARIABLE for variables
kconfig: use specific tokens instead of T_ASSIGN for assignments
kconfig: refactor scanning and parsing "option" properties
kconfig: use distinct tokens for type and default properties
kconfig: remove redundant token defines
kconfig: rename depends_list to comment_option_list
...
document on perf security, more Italian translations, more
improvements to the memory-management docs, improvements to the
pathname lookup documentation, and the usual array of smaller
fixes.
-----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE-----
iQFDBAABCAAtFiEEIw+MvkEiF49krdp9F0NaE2wMflgFAlwmSPkPHGNvcmJldEBs
d24ubmV0AAoJEBdDWhNsDH5Y9ZoH/joPnMFykOxS0SmdfI7Z+F4EiJct/ZwF9bHx
T673T0RC30IgnUXGmBl5OtktfWqVh9aGqHOGwgh65ybp2QvzemdP0k6Lu6RtwNk9
6LfkpvuUb8FzaQmCHnSMzMSDmXtZUw3Z/mOjCBcQtfGAsUULNT08xl+Dr+gwWIWt
H+gPEEP+MCXTOQO1jm2dHOHW8NGm6XOijMTpOxp/pkoEY5tUxkVB1T//8EeX7LVh
c1QHzFrufE3bmmubCLtIuyVqZbm/V5l6rHREDQ46fnH/G9fM4gojzsrAL/Y2m4bt
E4y0XJHycjLMRDimAnYhbPm1ryTFAX1lNzHP3M/EF6Heqx8YHAk=
=vtwu
-----END PGP SIGNATURE-----
Merge tag 'docs-5.0' of git://git.lwn.net/linux
Pull documentation update from Jonathan Corbet:
"A fairly normal cycle for documentation stuff. We have a new document
on perf security, more Italian translations, more improvements to the
memory-management docs, improvements to the pathname lookup
documentation, and the usual array of smaller fixes.
As is often the case, there are a few reaches outside of
Documentation/ to adjust kerneldoc comments"
* tag 'docs-5.0' of git://git.lwn.net/linux: (38 commits)
docs: improve pathname-lookup document structure
configfs: fix wrong name of struct in documentation
docs/mm-api: link slab_common.c to "The Slab Cache" section
slab: make kmem_cache_create{_usercopy} description proper kernel-doc
doc:process: add links where missing
docs/core-api: make mm-api.rst more structured
x86, boot: documentation whitespace fixup
Documentation: devres: note checking needs when converting
doc🇮🇹 add some process/* translations
doc🇮🇹 fixes in process/1.Intro
Documentation: convert path-lookup from markdown to resturctured text
Documentation/admin-guide: update admin-guide index.rst
Documentation/admin-guide: introduce perf-security.rst file
scripts/kernel-doc: Fix struct and struct field attribute processing
Documentation: dev-tools: Fix typos in index.rst
Correct gen_init_cpio tool's documentation
Document /proc/pid PID reuse behavior
Documentation: update path-lookup.md for parallel lookups
Documentation: Use "while" instead of "whilst"
dmaengine: Add mailing list address to the documentation
...
Pull Devicetree updates from Rob Herring:
"The biggest highlight here is the start of using json-schema for DT
bindings. Being able to validate bindings has been discussed for years
with little progress.
- Initial support for DT bindings using json-schema language. This is
the start of converting DT bindings from free-form text to a
structured format.
- Reworking of initrd address initialization. This moves to using the
phys address instead of virt addr in the DT parsing code. This
rework was motivated by CONFIG_DEV_BLK_INITRD causing unnecessary
rebuilding of lots of files.
- Fix stale phandle entries in phandle cache
- DT overlay validation improvements. This exposed several memory
leak bugs which have been fixed.
- Use node name and device_type helper functions in DT code
- Last remaining conversions to using %pOFn printk specifier instead
of device_node.name directly
- Create new common RTC binding doc and move all trivial RTC devices
out of trivial-devices.txt.
- New bindings for Freescale MAG3110 magnetometer, Cadence Sierra
PHY, and Xen shared memory
- Update dtc to upstream version v1.4.7-57-gf267e674d145"
* tag 'devicetree-for-4.21' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/robh/linux: (68 commits)
of: __of_detach_node() - remove node from phandle cache
of: of_node_get()/of_node_put() nodes held in phandle cache
gpio-omap.txt: add reg and interrupts properties
dt-bindings: mrvl,intc: fix a trivial typo
dt-bindings: iio: magnetometer: add dt-bindings for freescale mag3110
dt-bindings: Convert trivial-devices.txt to json-schema
dt-bindings: arm: mrvl: amend Browstone compatible string
dt-bindings: arm: Convert Tegra board/soc bindings to json-schema
dt-bindings: arm: Convert ZTE board/soc bindings to json-schema
dt-bindings: arm: Add missing Xilinx boards
dt-bindings: arm: Convert Xilinx board/soc bindings to json-schema
dt-bindings: arm: Convert VIA board/soc bindings to json-schema
dt-bindings: arm: Convert ST STi board/soc bindings to json-schema
dt-bindings: arm: Convert SPEAr board/soc bindings to json-schema
dt-bindings: arm: Convert CSR SiRF board/soc bindings to json-schema
dt-bindings: arm: Convert QCom board/soc bindings to json-schema
dt-bindings: arm: Convert TI nspire board/soc bindings to json-schema
dt-bindings: arm: Convert TI davinci board/soc bindings to json-schema
dt-bindings: arm: Convert Calxeda board/soc bindings to json-schema
dt-bindings: arm: Convert Altera board/soc bindings to json-schema
...
Add a script that will run spdxcheck.py through a couple of self tests to
simplify validation in the future. The tests are run for both Python 2
and Python 3 to make sure all changes to the script remain compatible
across both versions.
The script tests a regular text file (Makefile) for basic sanity checks
and then runs it on a binary file (Documentation/logo.gif) to make sure it
works in both cases. It also tests opening files passed on the command
line as well as piped files read from standard input. Finally a run on
the complete tree will be performed to catch any other potential issues.
Link: http://lkml.kernel.org/r/20181212131210.28024-2-thierry.reding@gmail.com
Signed-off-by: Thierry Reding <treding@nvidia.com>
Thomas Gleixner <tglx@linutronix.de>
Cc: Jonathan Corbet <corbet@lwn.net>
Cc: Joe Perches <joe@perches.com>
Cc: Jeremy Cline <jcline@redhat.com>
Cc: Uwe Kleine-König <u.kleine-koenig@pengutronix.de>
Signed-off-by: Andrew Morton <akpm@linux-foundation.org>
Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@linux-foundation.org>
This is to track dynamic amount of stack growth for aarch64, so it is
possible to print out offensive functions that may consume too much stack.
For example,
0xffff2000084d1270 try_to_unmap_one [vmlinux]: Dynamic (0xcf0)
0xffff200008538358 migrate_page_move_mapping [vmlinux]: Dynamic (0xc60)
0xffff2000081276c8 copy_process.isra.2 [vmlinux]: Dynamic (0xb20)
0xffff200008424958 show_free_areas [vmlinux]: Dynamic (0xb40)
0xffff200008545178 __split_huge_pmd_locked [vmlinux]: Dynamic (0xb30)
0xffff200008555120 collapse_shmem [vmlinux]: Dynamic (0xbc0)
0xffff20000862e0d0 do_direct_IO [vmlinux]: Dynamic (0xb70)
0xffff200008cc0aa0 md_do_sync [vmlinux]: Dynamic (0xb90)
Link: http://lkml.kernel.org/r/20181208025143.39363-1-cai@lca.pw
Signed-off-by: Qian Cai <cai@lca.pw>
Cc: Catalin Marinas <catalin.marinas@arm.com>
Cc: Will Deacon <will.deacon@arm.com>
Signed-off-by: Andrew Morton <akpm@linux-foundation.org>
Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@linux-foundation.org>
Running something like:
decodecode vmlinux .
leads to interested results where not only the leading "." gets stripped
from the displayed paths, but also anywhere in the string, displaying
something like:
kvm_vcpu_check_block (arch/arm64/kvm/virt/kvm/kvm_mainc:2141)
which doesn't help further processing.
Fix it by only stripping the base path if it is a prefix of the path.
Link: http://lkml.kernel.org/r/20181210174659.31054-3-marc.zyngier@arm.com
Signed-off-by: Marc Zyngier <marc.zyngier@arm.com>
Cc: Will Deacon <will.deacon@arm.com>
Signed-off-by: Andrew Morton <akpm@linux-foundation.org>
Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@linux-foundation.org>
When running decodecode natively on arm64, ARCH is likely not to be set,
and we end-up with .4byte instead of .inst when generating the
disassembly.
Similar effects would occur if running natively on a 32bit ARM platform,
although that's even less popular.
A simple workaround is to populate ARCH when it is not set and that we're
running on an arm/arm64 system.
Link: http://lkml.kernel.org/r/20181210174659.31054-2-marc.zyngier@arm.com
Signed-off-by: Marc Zyngier <marc.zyngier@arm.com>
Acked-by: Will Deacon <will.deacon@arm.com>
Signed-off-by: Andrew Morton <akpm@linux-foundation.org>
Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@linux-foundation.org>
This commit splits the current CONFIG_KASAN config option into two:
1. CONFIG_KASAN_GENERIC, that enables the generic KASAN mode (the one
that exists now);
2. CONFIG_KASAN_SW_TAGS, that enables the software tag-based KASAN mode.
The name CONFIG_KASAN_SW_TAGS is chosen as in the future we will have
another hardware tag-based KASAN mode, that will rely on hardware memory
tagging support in arm64.
With CONFIG_KASAN_SW_TAGS enabled, compiler options are changed to
instrument kernel files with -fsantize=kernel-hwaddress (except the ones
for which KASAN_SANITIZE := n is set).
Both CONFIG_KASAN_GENERIC and CONFIG_KASAN_SW_TAGS support both
CONFIG_KASAN_INLINE and CONFIG_KASAN_OUTLINE instrumentation modes.
This commit also adds empty placeholder (for now) implementation of
tag-based KASAN specific hooks inserted by the compiler and adjusts
common hooks implementation.
While this commit adds the CONFIG_KASAN_SW_TAGS config option, this option
is not selectable, as it depends on HAVE_ARCH_KASAN_SW_TAGS, which we will
enable once all the infrastracture code has been added.
Link: http://lkml.kernel.org/r/b2550106eb8a68b10fefbabce820910b115aa853.1544099024.git.andreyknvl@google.com
Signed-off-by: Andrey Konovalov <andreyknvl@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Andrey Ryabinin <aryabinin@virtuozzo.com>
Reviewed-by: Dmitry Vyukov <dvyukov@google.com>
Cc: Christoph Lameter <cl@linux.com>
Cc: Mark Rutland <mark.rutland@arm.com>
Cc: Will Deacon <will.deacon@arm.com>
Signed-off-by: Andrew Morton <akpm@linux-foundation.org>
Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@linux-foundation.org>
Fix the following warning:
no previous prototype for ‘dbg_sym_flags’ [-Wmissing-prototypes]
Signed-off-by: Masahiro Yamada <yamada.masahiro@socionext.com>
Currently, images.c is included by qconf.cc and gconf.c.
qconf.cc uses all of xpm_* arrays, but gconf.c only some of them.
Hence, lots of "... defined but not used" warnings are displayed
while compiling gconf.c
Splitting out images.c fixes the warnings.
Signed-off-by: Masahiro Yamada <yamada.masahiro@socionext.com>
Add "static" to functions that are locally used in gconf.c
This fixes some "no previous prototype for ..." warnings.
Signed-off-by: Masahiro Yamada <yamada.masahiro@socionext.com>
I want to compile each C file independently instead of including all
of them from zconf.y.
Split out confdata.c, expr.c, symbol.c, and preprocess.c .
These are low-hanging fruits.
Signed-off-by: Masahiro Yamada <yamada.masahiro@socionext.com>
All files in lxdialog/ are licensed under GPL-2.0+, and the rest are
under GPL-2.0. I added GPL-2.0 tags to test scripts in tests/.
Documentation/process/license-rules.rst does not suggest anything
about the flex/bison files. Because flex does not accept the C++
comment style at the very top of a file, I used the C style for
zconf.l, and so for zconf.y for consistency.
Signed-off-by: Masahiro Yamada <yamada.masahiro@socionext.com>
Commit 7a88488bbc ("[PATCH] kconfig: use gperf for kconfig keywords")
introduced gperf for the keyword lookup.
Then, commit bb3290d916 ("Remove gperf usage from toolchain") killed
the gperf use. As a result, the linear keyword search was left behind.
If we do not use gperf, there is no reason to have the separate table
of the keywords. Move all keywords back to the lexer.
I also refactored the lexer to remove the COMMAND and PARAM states.
Signed-off-by: Masahiro Yamada <yamada.masahiro@socionext.com>
- Enable per-task stack protector for ARM (Ard Biesheuvel)
-----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE-----
Comment: Kees Cook <kees@outflux.net>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=AkLm
-----END PGP SIGNATURE-----
Merge tag 'gcc-plugins-v4.21-rc1' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/kees/linux
Pull gcc-plugins update from Kees Cook:
"Both arm and arm64 are gaining per-task stack canaries (to match x86),
but arm is being done with a gcc plugin, hence it going through the
gcc-plugins tree.
New gcc-plugin:
- Enable per-task stack protector for ARM (Ard Biesheuvel)"
* tag 'gcc-plugins-v4.21-rc1' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/kees/linux:
ARM: smp: add support for per-task stack canaries
Pull RCU updates from Ingo Molnar:
"The biggest RCU changes in this cycle were:
- Convert RCU's BUG_ON() and similar calls to WARN_ON() and similar.
- Replace calls of RCU-bh and RCU-sched update-side functions to
their vanilla RCU counterparts. This series is a step towards
complete removal of the RCU-bh and RCU-sched update-side functions.
( Note that some of these conversions are going upstream via their
respective maintainers. )
- Documentation updates, including a number of flavor-consolidation
updates from Joel Fernandes.
- Miscellaneous fixes.
- Automate generation of the initrd filesystem used for rcutorture
testing.
- Convert spin_is_locked() assertions to instead use lockdep.
( Note that some of these conversions are going upstream via their
respective maintainers. )
- SRCU updates, especially including a fix from Dennis Krein for a
bag-on-head-class bug.
- RCU torture-test updates"
* 'core-rcu-for-linus' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/tip/tip: (112 commits)
rcutorture: Don't do busted forward-progress testing
rcutorture: Use 100ms buckets for forward-progress callback histograms
rcutorture: Recover from OOM during forward-progress tests
rcutorture: Print forward-progress test age upon failure
rcutorture: Print time since GP end upon forward-progress failure
rcutorture: Print histogram of CB invocation at OOM time
rcutorture: Print GP age upon forward-progress failure
rcu: Print per-CPU callback counts for forward-progress failures
rcu: Account for nocb-CPU callback counts in RCU CPU stall warnings
rcutorture: Dump grace-period diagnostics upon forward-progress OOM
rcutorture: Prepare for asynchronous access to rcu_fwd_startat
torture: Remove unnecessary "ret" variables
rcutorture: Affinity forward-progress test to avoid housekeeping CPUs
rcutorture: Break up too-long rcu_torture_fwd_prog() function
rcutorture: Remove cbflood facility
torture: Bring any extra CPUs online during kernel startup
rcutorture: Add call_rcu() flooding forward-progress tests
rcutorture/formal: Replace synchronize_sched() with synchronize_rcu()
tools/kernel.h: Replace synchronize_sched() with synchronize_rcu()
net/decnet: Replace rcu_barrier_bh() with rcu_barrier()
...
Pull parisc updates from Helge Deller:
"The major change in this patchset is the new system call table
generation support from Firoz Khan"
* 'parisc-4.21-1' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/deller/parisc-linux:
parisc: syscalls: ignore nfsservctl for other architectures
parisc: generate uapi header and system call table files
parisc: add system call table generation support
parisc: remove __NR_Linux from uapi header file.
parisc: add __NR_syscalls along with __NR_Linux_syscalls
parisc: move __IGNORE* entries to non uapi header
parisc: Fix HP SDC hpa address output
parisc: Fix serio address output
parisc: Split out alternative live patching code
Pull x86 fixes from Ingo Molnar:
"The biggest part is a series of reverts for the macro based GCC
inlining workarounds. It caused regressions in distro build and other
kernel tooling environments, and the GCC project was very receptive to
fixing the underlying inliner weaknesses - so as time ran out we
decided to do a reasonably straightforward revert of the patches. The
plan is to rely on the 'asm inline' GCC 9 feature, which might be
backported to GCC 8 and could thus become reasonably widely available
on modern distros.
Other than those reverts, there's misc fixes from all around the
place.
I wish our final x86 pull request for v4.20 was smaller..."
* 'x86-urgent-for-linus' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/tip/tip:
Revert "kbuild/Makefile: Prepare for using macros in inline assembly code to work around asm() related GCC inlining bugs"
Revert "x86/objtool: Use asm macros to work around GCC inlining bugs"
Revert "x86/refcount: Work around GCC inlining bug"
Revert "x86/alternatives: Macrofy lock prefixes to work around GCC inlining bugs"
Revert "x86/bug: Macrofy the BUG table section handling, to work around GCC inlining bugs"
Revert "x86/paravirt: Work around GCC inlining bugs when compiling paravirt ops"
Revert "x86/extable: Macrofy inline assembly code to work around GCC inlining bugs"
Revert "x86/cpufeature: Macrofy inline assembly code to work around GCC inlining bugs"
Revert "x86/jump-labels: Macrofy inline assembly code to work around GCC inlining bugs"
x86/mtrr: Don't copy uninitialized gentry fields back to userspace
x86/fsgsbase/64: Fix the base write helper functions
x86/mm/cpa: Fix cpa_flush_array() TLB invalidation
x86/vdso: Pass --eh-frame-hdr to the linker
x86/mm: Fix decoy address handling vs 32-bit builds
x86/intel_rdt: Ensure a CPU remains online for the region's pseudo-locking sequence
x86/dump_pagetables: Fix LDT remap address marker
x86/mm: Fix guard hole handling
Commit c512d2544c ("gitignore: ignore scripts/ihex2fw") was unneeded.
ihex2fw was generated in firmware/ instead of scripts/ at that time
although ihex2fw.c was pushed back and forth between those directories
in the past.
check-lc_ctype was removed by commit cb43fb5775 ("docs: remove
DocBook from the building system").
Signed-off-by: Masahiro Yamada <yamada.masahiro@socionext.com>
To simplify the generated lexer, let the hand-made lexer update the
file name and line number for the parser.
I tested this with DEBUG_PARSE, and confirmed the same file names
and line numbers were dumped.
Signed-off-by: Masahiro Yamada <yamada.masahiro@socionext.com>
The lexer has conventionally associated kconf_id data with yylval
to carry additional information to the parser.
No token is relying on this any more.
Signed-off-by: Masahiro Yamada <yamada.masahiro@socionext.com>
T_ENDMENU, T_ENDCHOICE, T_ENDIF are the last users of kconf_id
associated with yylval. Refactor them to not use it.
Signed-off-by: Masahiro Yamada <yamada.masahiro@socionext.com>
In my understanding, special characters such as '.' and '/' are
supported in unquoted words to use bare file paths in the "source"
statement.
With the previous commit surrounding all file paths with double
quotes, we can drop this.
Signed-off-by: Masahiro Yamada <yamada.masahiro@socionext.com>
There is no grammatical ambiguity by using T_WORD for variables.
The parser can distinguish variables from symbols from the context.
Signed-off-by: Masahiro Yamada <yamada.masahiro@socionext.com>
Currently, the lexer returns T_ASSIGN for all of =, :=, and +=
associating yylval with the flavor.
I want to make the generated lexer as simple as possible. So, the
lexer should convert keywords to tokens without thinking about the
meaning.
= -> T_EQUAL
:= -> T_COLON_EQUAL
+= -> T_PLUS_EQUAL
Unfortunately, Kconfig uses = instead of == for the equal operator.
So, the same token T_EQUAL is used for assignment and comparison.
The parser can still distinguish them from the context.
Signed-off-by: Masahiro Yamada <yamada.masahiro@socionext.com>
For the keywords "modules", "defconfig_list", and "allnoconfig_y",
the lexer should pass specific tokens instead of generic T_WORD.
This simplifies both the lexer and the parser.
Signed-off-by: Masahiro Yamada <yamada.masahiro@socionext.com>
This commit removes kconf_id::stype to prepare for the entire
removal of kconf_id.c
To simplify the lexer, I want keywords straight-mapped to tokens.
Signed-off-by: Masahiro Yamada <yamada.masahiro@socionext.com>
The LLVM/Clang project provides many tools for analyzing C source code.
Many of these tools are based on LibTooling
(https://clang.llvm.org/docs/LibTooling.html), which depends on a
database of compiler flags. The standard container for this database is
compile_commands.json, which consists of a list of JSON objects, each
with "directory", "file", and "command" fields.
Some build systems, like cmake or bazel, produce this compilation
information directly. Naturally, Makefiles don't. However, the kernel
makefiles already create .<target>.o.cmd files that contain all the
information needed to build a compile_commands.json file.
So, this commit adds scripts/gen_compile_commands.py, which recursively
searches through a directory for .<target>.o.cmd files and extracts
appropriate compile commands from them. It writes a
compile_commands.json file that LibTooling-based tools can use.
By default, gen_compile_commands.py starts its search in its working
directory and (over)writes compile_commands.json in the working
directory. However, it also supports --output and --directory flags for
out-of-tree use.
Note that while gen_compile_commands.py enables the use of clang-based
tools, it does not require the kernel to be compiled with clang. E.g.,
the following sequence of commands produces a compile_commands.json file
that works correctly with LibTooling.
make defconfig
make
scripts/gen_compile_commands.py
Also note that this script is written to work correctly in both Python 2
and Python 3, so it does not specify the Python version in its first
line.
For an example of the utility of this script: after running
gen_compile_commands.json on the latest kernel version, I was able to
use Vim + the YouCompleteMe pluging + clangd to automatically jump to
definitions and declarations. Obviously, cscope and ctags provide some
of this functionality; the advantage of supporting LibTooling is that it
opens the door to many other clang-based tools that understand the code
directly and do not rely on regular expressions and heuristics.
Tested: Built several recent kernel versions and ran the script against
them, testing tools like clangd (for editor/LSP support) and clang-check
(for static analysis). Also extracted some test .cmd files from a kernel
build and wrote a test script to check that the script behaved correctly
with all permutations of the --output and --directory flags.
Signed-off-by: Tom Roeder <tmroeder@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Masahiro Yamada <yamada.masahiro@socionext.com>
"Assignment" requires the assigned value before the place that
value is stored into.
Signed-off-by: Julia Lawall <Julia.Lawall@lip6.fr>
Signed-off-by: Masahiro Yamada <yamada.masahiro@socionext.com>
Some code may overall use 0 and 1, so don't introduce occasional
uses of true and false in these cases.
Signed-off-by: Julia Lawall <Julia.Lawall@lip6.fr>
Signed-off-by: Masahiro Yamada <yamada.masahiro@socionext.com>
part-of-module and quiet_modtag are set for the same targets.
Define quiet_modtag based on part-of-module.
Signed-off-by: Masahiro Yamada <yamada.masahiro@socionext.com>
All objects in $(obj-m) are contained in $(real-obj-m) as well.
It is true composite objects are only contained in $(obj-m),
but [M] is hard-coded in quiet_cmd_link_multi-m.
This line is redundant.
Signed-off-by: Masahiro Yamada <yamada.masahiro@socionext.com>
- Use conventional $(MAKE) $(asm-generic)=<dir> style
for directory descending
- Remove unneeded FORCE since "all" is a phony target
- Remove unneeded "_dummy :=" assignment
- Skip $(shell mkdir ...) when headers exist in the directory
- Misc cleanups
Signed-off-by: Masahiro Yamada <yamada.masahiro@socionext.com>
Acked-by: Sam Ravnborg <sam@ravnborg.org>
Currently, "visible" and "depends on", if defined in a menu entry,
must appear in that order.
The real example is in drivers/media/tuners/Kconfig:
menu "Customize TV tuners"
visible if <expr1>
depends on <expr2>
... is fine, but you cannot change the property order like this:
menu "Customize TV tuners"
depends on <expr2>
visible if <expr1>
Kconfig does not require a specific order of properties. In this case,
menu_add_visibility(() and menu_add_dep() are orthogonal.
Loosen this unreasonable restriction.
Signed-off-by: Masahiro Yamada <yamada.masahiro@socionext.com>
The code block surrounded by "menu" ... "endmenu" is stmt_list.
Remove the redundant menu_block symbol entirely.
Signed-off-by: Masahiro Yamada <yamada.masahiro@socionext.com>
The code block surrounded by "if" ... "endif" is stmt_list.
Remove the redundant if_block symbol entirely.
Remove "stmt_list: stmt_list end" rule as well since it would
obviously cause conflicts.
Signed-off-by: Masahiro Yamada <yamada.masahiro@socionext.com>
This commit decreases 6 shift/reduce conflicts, and finally achieves
conflict-free parser.
Since Kconfig has no terminator for a config block, detecting the end
of config_stmt is not easy.
For example, there are two ways for handling the error in the following
code:
1 config FOO
2 =
[A] Print "unknown option" error, assuming the line 2 is a part of
config_option_list
[B] Print "invalid statement", assuming the line 1 is reduced into
a config_stmt by itself
Bison actually chooses [A] because it performs the shift rather than
the reduction where both are possible.
However, there is no reason to choose one over the other.
Let's remove the option_error, and let it fall back to [B].
Signed-off-by: Masahiro Yamada <yamada.masahiro@socionext.com>
This commit decreases 15 shift/reduce conflicts.
The location of this error recovery is ambiguous.
For example, there are two ways to interpret the following code:
1 config FOO
2 bool "foo"
[A] Both lines are reduced together into a config_stmt.
[B] The only line 1 is reduced into a config_stmt, and the line 2
matches to "option_name error T_EOL"
Of course, we expect [A], but [B] could be grammatically possible.
Kconfig has no terminator for a config block. So, we cannot detect its
end until we see a non-property keyword. People often insert a blank
line between two config blocks, but it is just a coding convention.
Blank lines are actually allowed anywhere in Kconfig files.
The real error is when a property keyword appears right after "endif",
"endchoice", "endmenu", "source", "comment", or variable assignment.
Instead of fixing the grammatical ambiguity, I chose to simply remove
this error recovery.
The difference is
unexpected option "bool"
... is turned into a more generic message:
invalid statement
Signed-off-by: Masahiro Yamada <yamada.masahiro@socionext.com>
It would be nice to warn if a new line is missing at end of file.
We could do this by checkpatch.pl for arbitrary files, but new line
is rather essential as a statement terminator in Kconfig.
The warning message looks like this:
kernel/Kconfig.preempt:60:warning: no new line at end of file
Currently, kernel/Kconfig.preempt is the only file with no new line
at end of file. Fix it.
I know there are some false negative cases. For example, no warning
is displayed when the last line contains some whitespaces/comments,
but no new line. Yet, this commit works well for most cases.
Signed-off-by: Masahiro Yamada <yamada.masahiro@socionext.com>
The spdxcheck script currently falls over when confronted with a binary
file (such as Documentation/logo.gif). To avoid that, always open files
in binary mode and decode line-by-line, ignoring encoding errors.
One tricky case is when piping data into the script and reading it from
standard input. By default, standard input will be opened in text mode,
so we need to reopen it in binary mode.
The breakage only happens with python3 and results in a
UnicodeDecodeError (according to Uwe).
Link: http://lkml.kernel.org/r/20181212131210.28024-1-thierry.reding@gmail.com
Fixes: 6f4d29df66 ("scripts/spdxcheck.py: make python3 compliant")
Signed-off-by: Thierry Reding <treding@nvidia.com>
Reviewed-by: Jeremy Cline <jcline@redhat.com>
Cc: Thomas Gleixner <tglx@linutronix.de>
Cc: Jonathan Corbet <corbet@lwn.net>
Cc: Joe Perches <joe@perches.com>
Cc: Uwe Kleine-König <u.kleine-koenig@pengutronix.de>
Cc: <stable@vger.kernel.org>
Signed-off-by: Andrew Morton <akpm@linux-foundation.org>
Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@linux-foundation.org>
There is actually a space after "sp," like this,
ffff2000080813c8: a9bb7bfd stp x29, x30, [sp, #-80]!
Right now, checkstack.pl isn't able to print anything on aarch64,
because it won't be able to match the stating objdump line of a function
due to this missing space. Hence, it displays every stack as zero-size.
After this patch, checkpatch.pl is able to match the start of a
function's objdump, and is then able to calculate each function's stack
correctly.
Link: http://lkml.kernel.org/r/20181207195843.38528-1-cai@lca.pw
Signed-off-by: Qian Cai <cai@lca.pw>
Signed-off-by: Andrew Morton <akpm@linux-foundation.org>
Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@linux-foundation.org>
This adds the build infrastructure for checking DT binding schema
documents and validating dts files using the binding schema.
Check DT binding schema documents:
make dt_binding_check
Build dts files and check using DT binding schema:
make dtbs_check
Optionally, DT_SCHEMA_FILES can be passed in with a schema file(s) to
use for validation. This makes it easier to find and fix errors
generated by a specific schema.
Currently, the validation targets are separate from a normal build to
avoid a hard dependency on the external DT schema project and because
there are lots of warnings generated.
Cc: Jonathan Corbet <corbet@lwn.net>
Cc: Mark Rutland <mark.rutland@arm.com>
Acked-by: Masahiro Yamada <yamada.masahiro@socionext.com>
Cc: Michal Marek <michal.lkml@markovi.net>
Cc: linux-doc@vger.kernel.org
Cc: devicetree@vger.kernel.org
Cc: linux-kbuild@vger.kernel.org
Signed-off-by: Rob Herring <robh@kernel.org>
On ARM, we currently only change the value of the stack canary when
switching tasks if the kernel was built for UP. On SMP kernels, this
is impossible since the stack canary value is obtained via a global
symbol reference, which means
a) all running tasks on all CPUs must use the same value
b) we can only modify the value when no kernel stack frames are live
on any CPU, which is effectively never.
So instead, use a GCC plugin to add a RTL pass that replaces each
reference to the address of the __stack_chk_guard symbol with an
expression that produces the address of the 'stack_canary' field
that is added to struct thread_info. This way, each task will use
its own randomized value.
Cc: Russell King <linux@armlinux.org.uk>
Cc: Kees Cook <keescook@chromium.org>
Cc: Emese Revfy <re.emese@gmail.com>
Cc: Arnd Bergmann <arnd@arndb.de>
Cc: Laura Abbott <labbott@redhat.com>
Cc: kernel-hardening@lists.openwall.com
Acked-by: Nicolas Pitre <nico@linaro.org>
Signed-off-by: Ard Biesheuvel <ard.biesheuvel@linaro.org>
Signed-off-by: Kees Cook <keescook@chromium.org>
A new file should always start in the INITIAL state.
When the lexer bumps into EOF, the lexer must get back to the INITIAL
state anyway. Remove the redundant <<EOF>> pattern in the PARAM state.
Signed-off-by: Masahiro Yamada <yamada.masahiro@socionext.com>
This commit decreases 8 shift/reduce conflicts.
A certain amount of grammatical ambiguity comes from how to reduce
excessive T_EOL tokens.
Let's take a look at the example code below:
1 config A
2 bool "a"
3
4 depends on B
5
6 config B
7 def_bool y
The line 3 is melt into "config_option_list", but the line 5 can be
either a part of "config_option_list" or "common_stmt" by itself.
Currently, the lexer converts '\n' to T_EOL verbatim. In Kconfig,
a new line works as a statement terminator, but new lines in empty
lines are not critical since empty lines (or lines that contain only
whitespaces/comments) are just no-op.
If the lexer simply discards no-op lines, the parser will not be
bothered by excessive T_EOL tokens.
Of course, this means we are shifting the complexity from the parser
to the lexer, but it is much easier than tackling on shift/reduce
conflicts.
I introduced the second stage lexer to tweak the behavior.
Discard T_EOL if the previous token is T_EOL or T_HELPTEXT.
Two T_EOL tokens in a row is meaningless. T_HELPTEXT is a special
token that is reduced without T_EOL.
Signed-off-by: Masahiro Yamada <yamada.masahiro@socionext.com>
Here, similar matching patters are duplicated in order to look ahead
the '\n' character. If the next character is '\n', the lexer returns
T_WORD_QUOTE because it must be prepared to return T_EOL at the next
match.
Use unput('\n') trick to reduce the code duplication.
Signed-off-by: Masahiro Yamada <yamada.masahiro@socionext.com>
All line-oriented statements should be reduced when seeing a T_EOL
token. I guess missing T_EOL for the "visible" statement is just a
mistake. This commit decreases one shift/reduce conflict.
Signed-off-by: Masahiro Yamada <yamada.masahiro@socionext.com>
An unterminated string literal followed by new line is passed to the
parser (with "multi-line strings not supported" warning shown), then
handled properly there.
On the other hand, an unterminated string literal at end of file is
never passed to the parser, then results in memory leak.
[Test Code]
----------(Kconfig begin)----------
source "Kconfig.inc"
config A
bool "a"
-----------(Kconfig end)-----------
--------(Kconfig.inc begin)--------
config B
bool "b\No new line at end of file
---------(Kconfig.inc end)---------
[Summary from Valgrind]
Before the fix:
LEAK SUMMARY:
definitely lost: 16 bytes in 1 blocks
...
After the fix:
LEAK SUMMARY:
definitely lost: 0 bytes in 0 blocks
...
Eliminate the memory leak path by handling this case. Of course, such
a Kconfig file is wrong already, so I will add an error message later.
Signed-off-by: Masahiro Yamada <yamada.masahiro@socionext.com>
Currently, warn_ignore_character() displays invalid file name and
line number.
The lexer should use current_file->name and yylineno, while the parser
should use zconf_curname() and zconf_lineno().
This difference comes from that the lexer is always going ahead
of the parser. The parser needs to look ahead one token to make a
shift/reduce decision, so the lexer is requested to scan more text
from the input file.
This commit fixes the warning message from warn_ignored_character().
[Test Code]
----(Kconfig begin)----
/
-----(Kconfig end)-----
[Output]
Before the fix:
<none>:0:warning: ignoring unsupported character '/'
After the fix:
Kconfig:1:warning: ignoring unsupported character '/'
Signed-off-by: Masahiro Yamada <yamada.masahiro@socionext.com>
Please, use at least K&R C; printf had been able to left-adjust
a field for as long as stdio existed and use of '*' for variable
width had been there since v7. Yes, the first edition of K&R
didn't cover the latter feature (it slightly predates v7), but
you are using a much later feature of the language than that -
in K&R C
static char *stoupperx(const char *s)
{
...
}
would've been spelled as
static char *stoupperx(s)
char *s;
{
...
}
While we are at it, the use of strstr() is bogus - it finds the
_first_ instance of substring, so it's a lousy fit for checking
if a string ends with given suffix...
Signed-off-by: Al Viro <viro@zeniv.linux.org.uk>
This adds an exception to the syscall table checking script.
nfsservctl entry is only provided on x86, and there is no
reason to add it elsewhere. However, including it on the
syscall table caused a warning for most configurations on
non-x86.
<stdin>:696:2: warning: #warning syscall nfsservctl not implemented [-Wcpp]
Signed-off-by: Firoz Khan <firoz.khan@linaro.org>
Acked-by: Helge Deller <deller@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Helge Deller <deller@gmx.de>
When building with -ffunction-sections, the compiler will place each
function into its own ELF section, prefixed with ".text". For example,
a simple test module with functions test_module_do_work() and
test_module_wq_func():
% objdump --section-headers test_module.o | awk '/\.text/{print $2}'
.text
.text.test_module_do_work
.text.test_module_wq_func
.init.text
.exit.text
Adjust the recordmcount scripts to look for ".text" as a section name
prefix. This will ensure that those functions will be included in the
__mcount_loc relocations:
% objdump --reloc --section __mcount_loc test_module.o
OFFSET TYPE VALUE
0000000000000000 R_X86_64_64 .text.test_module_do_work
0000000000000008 R_X86_64_64 .text.test_module_wq_func
0000000000000010 R_X86_64_64 .init.text
Link: http://lkml.kernel.org/r/1542745158-25392-2-git-send-email-joe.lawrence@redhat.com
Signed-off-by: Joe Lawrence <joe.lawrence@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Steven Rostedt (VMware) <rostedt@goodmis.org>
scripts/Makefile.headersinst takes care of *.agh just for
arch/cris/include/uapi/arch-v10/arch/sv_addr.agh
because renaming exported headers is difficult (or impossible).
This code is no longer necessary thanks to commit c690eddc2f ("CRIS:
Drop support for the CRIS port").
Signed-off-by: Masahiro Yamada <yamada.masahiro@socionext.com>
The only possibility of k_invalid being returned was when
expr_parse_sting() parsed S_OTHER type symbol. This actually never
happened, and this is even clearer since S_OTHER has gone.
Clean up unreachable code.
Signed-off-by: Masahiro Yamada <yamada.masahiro@socionext.com>
The S_OTHER type could be set only when conf_read_simple() is reading
include/config/auto.conf file.
For example, CONFIG_FOO=y exists in include/config/auto.conf but it is
missing from the currently parsed Kconfig files, sym_lookup() allocates
a new symbol, and sets its type to S_OTHER.
Strangely, it will be set to S_STRING by conf_set_sym_val() a few lines
below while it is obviously bool or tristate type. On the other hand,
when CONFIG_BAR="bar" is being dropped from include/config/auto.conf,
its type remains S_OTHER. Because for_all_symbols() omits S_OTHER
symbols, conf_touch_deps() misses to touch include/config/bar.h
This behavior has been a pretty mystery for me, and digging the git
histroy did not help. At least, touching depfiles is broken for string
type symbols.
I removed S_OTHER entirely, and reimplemented it more simply.
If CONFIG_FOO was visible in the previous syncconfig, but is missing
now, what we want to do is quite simple; just call conf_touch_dep()
to touch include/config/foo.h instead of allocating a new symbol data.
Signed-off-by: Masahiro Yamada <yamada.masahiro@socionext.com>
conf_touch_deps() iterates over symbols, touching corresponding
include/config/*.h files as needed.
Split the part that touches a single file into a new helper so it can
be reused.
The new helper, conf_touch_dep(), takes a symbol name as a parameter,
and touches the corresponding include/config/*.h file.
Signed-off-by: Masahiro Yamada <yamada.masahiro@socionext.com>
According to commit 2e3646e51b ("kconfig: integrate split config
into silentoldconfig"), this function was named after split-include
tool, which used to exist in old versions of Linux.
Setting aside the historical reason, rename it into a more intuitive
name. This function touches timestamp files under include/config/
in order to interact with the fixdep tool.
Signed-off-by: Masahiro Yamada <yamada.masahiro@socionext.com>
The two 'goto setsym' statements are reachable only when sym == NULL.
The code below the 'setsym:' label does nothing when sym == NULL
since there is just one if-block guarded by 'if (sym && ...)'.
Hence, 'goto setsym' can be replaced with 'continue'.
Signed-off-by: Masahiro Yamada <yamada.masahiro@socionext.com>
Currently the 'stackleak_cleanup' pass deleting a CALL insn is executed
after the 'reload' pass. That allows gcc to do some weird optimization in
function prologues and epilogues, which are generated later [1].
Let's avoid that by registering the 'stackleak_cleanup' pass before
the '*free_cfg' pass. It's the moment when the stack frame size is
already final, function prologues and epilogues are generated, and the
machine-dependent code transformations are not done.
[1] https://www.openwall.com/lists/kernel-hardening/2018/11/23/2
Reported-by: kbuild test robot <lkp@intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Alexander Popov <alex.popov@linux.com>
Signed-off-by: Kees Cook <keescook@chromium.org>
Pull RCU changes from Paul E. McKenney:
- Convert RCU's BUG_ON() and similar calls to WARN_ON() and similar.
- Replace calls of RCU-bh and RCU-sched update-side functions
to their vanilla RCU counterparts. This series is a step
towards complete removal of the RCU-bh and RCU-sched update-side
functions.
( Note that some of these conversions are going upstream via their
respective maintainers. )
- Documentation updates, including a number of flavor-consolidation
updates from Joel Fernandes.
- Miscellaneous fixes.
- Automate generation of the initrd filesystem used for
rcutorture testing.
- Convert spin_is_locked() assertions to instead use lockdep.
( Note that some of these conversions are going upstream via their
respective maintainers. )
- SRCU updates, especially including a fix from Dennis Krein
for a bag-on-head-class bug.
- RCU torture-test updates.
Signed-off-by: Ingo Molnar <mingo@kernel.org>
In commit 54a702f705 ("kbuild: mark $(targets) as .SECONDARY and
remove .PRECIOUS markers"), I missed one important feature of the
.SECONDARY target:
.SECONDARY with no prerequisites causes all targets to be
treated as secondary.
... which agrees with the policy of Kbuild.
Let's move it to scripts/Kbuild.include, with no prerequisites.
Note:
If an intermediate file is generated by $(call if_changed,...), you
still need to add it to "targets" so its .*.cmd file is included.
The arm/arm64 crypto files are generated by $(call cmd,shipped),
so they do not need to be added to "targets", but need to be added
to "clean-files" so "make clean" can properly clean them away.
Signed-off-by: Masahiro Yamada <yamada.masahiro@socionext.com>
Pull STIBP fallout fixes from Thomas Gleixner:
"The performance destruction department finally got it's act together
and came up with a cure for the STIPB regression:
- Provide a command line option to control the spectre v2 user space
mitigations. Default is either seccomp or prctl (if seccomp is
disabled in Kconfig). prctl allows mitigation opt-in, seccomp
enables the migitation for sandboxed processes.
- Rework the code to handle the conditional STIBP/IBPB control and
remove the now unused ptrace_may_access_sched() optimization
attempt
- Disable STIBP automatically when SMT is disabled
- Optimize the switch_to() logic to avoid MSR writes and invocations
of __switch_to_xtra().
- Make the asynchronous speculation TIF updates synchronous to
prevent stale mitigation state.
As a general cleanup this also makes retpoline directly depend on
compiler support and removes the 'minimal retpoline' option which just
pretended to provide some form of security while providing none"
* 'x86-pti-for-linus' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/tip/tip: (31 commits)
x86/speculation: Provide IBPB always command line options
x86/speculation: Add seccomp Spectre v2 user space protection mode
x86/speculation: Enable prctl mode for spectre_v2_user
x86/speculation: Add prctl() control for indirect branch speculation
x86/speculation: Prepare arch_smt_update() for PRCTL mode
x86/speculation: Prevent stale SPEC_CTRL msr content
x86/speculation: Split out TIF update
ptrace: Remove unused ptrace_may_access_sched() and MODE_IBRS
x86/speculation: Prepare for conditional IBPB in switch_mm()
x86/speculation: Avoid __switch_to_xtra() calls
x86/process: Consolidate and simplify switch_to_xtra() code
x86/speculation: Prepare for per task indirect branch speculation control
x86/speculation: Add command line control for indirect branch speculation
x86/speculation: Unify conditional spectre v2 print functions
x86/speculataion: Mark command line parser data __initdata
x86/speculation: Mark string arrays const correctly
x86/speculation: Reorder the spec_v2 code
x86/l1tf: Show actual SMT state
x86/speculation: Rework SMT state change
sched/smt: Expose sched_smt_present static key
...
These three cmd_* are invoked in the $(call cmd,*) form.
Now that 'set -e' moved to the 'cmd' macro, they do not need to
explicitly give 'set -e'.
Signed-off-by: Masahiro Yamada <yamada.masahiro@socionext.com>
With the change of rule_cc_o_c / rule_as_o_S in the last commit, each
command is executed in a separate subshell. Rip off unneeded semicolons.
Signed-off-by: Masahiro Yamada <yamada.masahiro@socionext.com>
The 'define' ... 'endef' directive is useful to confine a series of
shell commands into a single macro:
define foo
[action1]
[action2]
[action3]
endif
Each action is executed in a separate subshell.
However, rule_cc_o_c and rule_as_o_S in scripts/Makefile.build are
written as follows (with a trailing semicolon in each cmd_*):
define rule_cc_o_c
[action1] ; \
[action2] ; \
[action3] ;
endef
All shell commands are concatenated with '; \' so that it looks like
a single command from the Makefile point of view. This does not
exploit the benefits of 'define' ... 'endef' form because a single
shell command can be more simply written, like this:
rule_cc_o_c = \
[action1] ; \
[action2] ; \
[action3] ;
I guess the intention for the command concatenation was to let the
'@set -e' in if_changed_rule cover all the commands.
We can improve the readability by moving '@set -e' to the 'cmd' macro.
The combo of $(call echo-cmd,*) $(cmd_*) in rule_cc_o_c and rule_as_o_S
have been replaced with $(call cmd,*). The trailing back-slashes have
been removed.
Here is a note about the performance: the commands in rule_cc_o_c and
rule_as_o_S were previously executed all together in a single subshell,
but now each line in a separate subshell. This means Make will spawn
extra subshells [1]. I measured the build performance for
x86_64_defconfig + CONFIG_MODVERSIONS + CONFIG_TRIM_UNUSED_KSYMS
and I saw slight performance regression, but I believe code readability
and maintainability wins.
[1] Precisely, GNU Make may optimize this by executing the command
directly instead of forking a subshell, if no shell special
characters are found in the command line and omitting the subshell
will not change the behavior.
Signed-off-by: Masahiro Yamada <yamada.masahiro@socionext.com>
My main motivation of this commit is to clean up scripts/Kbuild.include
and scripts/Makefile.build.
Currently, CONFIG_TRIM_UNUSED_KSYMS works with a tricky gimmick;
possibly exported symbols are detected by letting $(CPP) replace
EXPORT_SYMBOL* with a special string '=== __KSYM_*===', which is
post-processed by sed, and passed to fixdep. The extra preprocessing
is costly, and hacking cmd_and_fixdep is ugly.
I came up with a new way to find exported symbols; insert a dummy
symbol __ksym_marker_* to each potentially exported symbol. Those
dummy symbols are picked up by $(NM), post-processed by sed, then
appended to .*.cmd files. I collected the post-process part to a
new shell script scripts/gen_ksymdeps.sh for readability. The dummy
symbols are put into the .discard.* section so that the linker
script rips them off the final vmlinux or modules.
A nice side-effect is building with CONFIG_TRIM_UNUSED_KSYMS will
be much faster.
Signed-off-by: Masahiro Yamada <yamada.masahiro@socionext.com>
Reviewed-by: Nicolas Pitre <nico@linaro.org>
Let $(CC) compile objects into normal files *.o instead of .tmp_*.o
whether CONFIG_MODVERSIONS is enabled or not. With this, the input
file for objtool is always *.o so objtool_o can go away.
I guess the reason of using .tmp_*.o for intermediate objects was
to avoid leaving incomplete *.o file (, whose timestamp says it is
up-to-date) when the genksyms tool failed for some reasons.
It no longer matters because any targets are deleted on errors since
commit 9c2af1c737 ("kbuild: add .DELETE_ON_ERROR special target").
Signed-off-by: Masahiro Yamada <yamada.masahiro@socionext.com>
Currently, fixdep writes dependencies to .*.tmp, which is renamed to
.*.cmd after everything succeeds. This is a very safe way to avoid
corrupted .*.cmd files. The if_changed_dep has carried this safety
mechanism since it was added in 2002.
If fixdep fails for some reasons or a user terminates the build while
fixdep is running, the incomplete output from the fixdep could be
troublesome.
This is my insight about some bad scenarios:
[1] If the compiler succeeds to generate *.o file, but fixdep fails
to write necessary dependencies to .*.cmd file, Make will miss
to rebuild the object when headers or CONFIG options are changed.
In this case, fixdep should not generate .*.cmd file at all so
that 'arg-check' will surely trigger the rebuild of the object.
[2] A partially constructed .*.cmd file may not be a syntactically
correct makefile. The next time Make runs, it would include it,
then fail to parse it. Once this happens, 'make clean' is be the
only way to fix it.
In fact, [1] is no longer a problem since commit 9c2af1c737 ("kbuild:
add .DELETE_ON_ERROR special target"). Make deletes a target file on
any failure in its recipe. Because fixdep is a part of the recipe of
*.o target, if it fails, the *.o is deleted anyway. However, I am a
bit worried about the slight possibility of [2].
So, here is a solution. Let fixdep directly write to a .*.cmd file,
but allow makefiles to include it only when its corresponding target
exists.
This effectively reverts commit 2982c95357 ("kbuild: remove redundant
$(wildcard ...) for cmd_files calculation"), and commit 00d78ab2ba
("kbuild: remove dead code in cmd_files calculation in top Makefile")
because now we must check the presence of targets.
Signed-off-by: Masahiro Yamada <yamada.masahiro@socionext.com>
Now that 'archprepare' depends on 'scripts', Kbuild can descend into
scripts/gcc-plugins in a more standard way.
Signed-off-by: Masahiro Yamada <yamada.masahiro@socionext.com>
Reviewed-by: Kees Cook <keescook@chromium.org>
I am eagar to build under the scripts/ directory only with $(HOSTCC),
but scripts/mod/ highly depends on the $(CC) and target arch headers.
That it why the 'scripts' target must depend on 'asm-generic',
'gcc-plugins', and $(autoksyms_h).
Move it to the 'prepare0' stage. I know this is a cheesy workaround,
but better than the current situation.
Signed-off-by: Masahiro Yamada <yamada.masahiro@socionext.com>
Probably, this is just a matter of the order of error/warning
messages. Merge the two for-loops.
Signed-off-by: Masahiro Yamada <yamada.masahiro@socionext.com>
You do not need to iterate over all modules for resetting ->seen flag
because add_depends() is only interested in modules that export symbols
referenced from the given 'mod'.
This also avoids shadowing the 'modules' parameter of add_depends().
Signed-off-by: Masahiro Yamada <yamada.masahiro@socionext.com>
Use specific prototype instead of an opaque pointer so that the
compiler can catch function prototype mismatch.
Signed-off-by: Masahiro Yamada <yamada.masahiro@socionext.com>
Reviewed-by: Mathieu Malaterre <malat@debian.org>
Commit e49ce14150 ("modpost: use linker section to generate table.")
was not so cool as we had expected first; it ended up with ugly section
hacks when commit dd2a3acaec ("mod/file2alias: make modpost compile
on darwin again") came in.
Given a certain degree of unknowledge about the link stage of host
programs, I really want to see simple, stupid table lookup so that
this works in the same way regardless of the underlying executable
format.
Signed-off-by: Masahiro Yamada <yamada.masahiro@socionext.com>
Acked-by: Mathieu Malaterre <malat@debian.org>
During development of a serial console driver with a gcc 8.2.0
toolchain for RISC-V, the following modpost warning appeared:
----
WARNING: vmlinux.o(.data+0x19b10): Section mismatch in reference from the variable .LANCHOR1 to the function .init.text:sifive_serial_console_setup()
The variable .LANCHOR1 references
the function __init sifive_serial_console_setup()
If the reference is valid then annotate the
variable with __init* or __refdata (see linux/init.h) or name the variable:
*_template, *_timer, *_sht, *_ops, *_probe, *_probe_one, *_console
----
".LANCHOR1" is an ELF local symbol, automatically created by gcc's section
anchor generation code:
https://gcc.gnu.org/onlinedocs/gccint/Anchored-Addresses.htmlhttps://gcc.gnu.org/git/?p=gcc.git;a=blob;f=gcc/varasm.c;h=cd9591a45617464946dcf9a126dde277d9de9804;hb=9fb89fa845c1b2e0a18d85ada0b077c84508ab78#l7473
This was verified by compiling the kernel with -fno-section-anchors
and observing that the ".LANCHOR1" ELF local symbol disappeared, and
modpost no longer warned about the section mismatch. The serial
driver code idiom triggering the warning is standard Linux serial
driver practice that has a specific whitelist inclusion in modpost.c.
I'm neither a modpost nor an ELF expert, but naively, it doesn't seem
useful for modpost to report section mismatch warnings caused by ELF
local symbols by default. Local symbols have compiler-generated
names, and thus bypass modpost's whitelisting algorithm, which relies
on the presence of a non-autogenerated symbol name. This increases
the likelihood that false positive warnings will be generated (as in
the above case).
Thus, disable section mismatch reporting on ELF local symbols. The
rationale here is similar to that of commit 2e3a10a155 ("ARM: avoid
ARM binutils leaking ELF local symbols") and of similar code already
present in modpost.c:
https://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/torvalds/linux.git/tree/scripts/mod/modpost.c?h=v4.19-rc4&id=7876320f88802b22d4e2daf7eb027dd14175a0f8#n1256
This third version of the patch implements a suggestion from Masahiro
Yamada <yamada.masahiro@socionext.com> to restructure the code as an
additional pattern matching step inside secref_whitelist(), and
further improves the patch description.
Signed-off-by: Paul Walmsley <paul.walmsley@sifive.com>
Signed-off-by: Paul Walmsley <paul@pwsan.com>
Acked-by: Sam Ravnborg <sam@ravnborg.org>
Signed-off-by: Masahiro Yamada <yamada.masahiro@socionext.com>
New versions of gcc reasonably warn about the odd pattern of
strncpy(p, q, strlen(q));
which really doesn't make sense: the strncpy() ends up being just a slow
and odd way to write memcpy() in this case.
There was a comment about _why_ the code used strncpy - to avoid the
terminating NUL byte, but memcpy does the same and avoids the warning.
Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@linux-foundation.org>
The updated version of dtc has a bug fix for simple_bus_reg warnings
and lots of warnings are generated now. So disable this warning by
default.
Signed-off-by: Rob Herring <robh@kernel.org>
This adds the following commits from upstream:
f267e674d145 checks: Fix crash with multiple source annotations
3616b9a811b6 checks: Use source position information for check failures
2bdbd07a1223 checks: Make each message output atomic
a1eff70c02cf util: Add xa{v}sprintf_append functions
82a52ce4573b libfdt: Add a test for fdt_getprop_by_offset()
607b8586b383 PEP8 / Flake8 cleanups for setup.py
f9c0a425b648 Remove broken objdir / srcdir support
5182b5e6f28c pylibfdt: Use common PREFIX variable
d45bf1f5f2a6 Refine make tests_clean target
99284c4db9cb Refine pylibfdt_clean target
a4629cfaedfb Refine libfdt_clean target
08380fc43aa2 tests: Use modern octal literals for Python
8113c00b99d3 pylibfdt: Allow switch to Python 3 via environment variable PYTHON
11738cf01f15 libfdt: Don't use memcpy to handle unaligned reads on ARM
86a288a73670 checks: Restructure check_msg to decrease indentation
5667e7ef9a9a annotations: add the annotation functionality
8e20ccf52f90 annotations: add positions
ca930e20bb54 tests: Don't lose errors from make checkm
43366bb4eeee tests: Property count valgrind errors in wrapped tests
5062516fb8cb srcpos: Remove srcpos_empty
a3143fafbf83 Revert "annotations: add positions"
403cc79f06a1 checks: Update SPI bus check for 'spi-slave'
baa1d2cf7894 annotations: add positions
ff2ad38f6a5a Merge remote-tracking branch 'origin/pr/18'
aa7254d9cb17 libfdt: return correct value if #size-cells property is not present
49903aed7783 use ptrdiff_t modifier for printing pointer differences
da2b691ccf68 treesource: Fix dts output for phandles in middle of a sequence of ints
8f8b77a0d62d tests: Wrap check_align() calls with base_run_test()
522d81d572f2 Fix dts output with a REF_PATH marker
e45198c98359 Added test cases for target references
0fcffda15e9f Merge nodes with local target label references
1e4a0928f3b3 pylibfdt: Don't have setup.py depend on where it's invoked from
ca399b14956f pylibfdt: Eliminate run_setup make function
98972f1b3e33 pylibfdt: Improved version extraction
7ba2be6cda5f pylibfdt: Don't silence setup.py when V=1
7691f9d39301 pylibfdt: Make SETUP make variable
855b9963def9 pylibfdt: Simpler CFLAGS handling
47cafbeeb977 pylibfdt: Link extension module with libfdt rather than rebuilding
dd695d6afb19 pylibfdt: Correctly set build output directory
59327523d0d8 pylibfdt: We don't need include files from the base directory
e84742aa7b93 checks: fix simple-bus compatible matching
8c59a97ce096 Fix missing labels when emitting dts format
d448f9a5fd94 Revert dts output formatting changes of spaces around brackets
Signed-off-by: Rob Herring <robh@kernel.org>
Core Changes:
- Merge drm_info.c into drm_debugfs.c
- Complete the fake drm_crtc_commit's hw_done/flip_done sooner.
- Remove deprecated drm_obj_ref/unref functions. All drivers use get/put now.
- Decrease stack use of drm_gem_prime_mmap.
- Improve documentation for dumb callbacks.
Driver Changes:
- Add edid support to virtio.
- Wait on implicit fence in meson and sun4i.
- Add support for BGRX8888 to sun4i.
- Preparation patches for sun4i driver to start supporting linear and tiled YUV formats.
- Add support for HDMI 1.4 4k modes to meson, and support for VIC alternate timings.
- Drop custom dumb_map in vkms.
- Small fixes and cleanups to v3d.
-----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE-----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=JNy2
-----END PGP SIGNATURE-----
Merge tag 'drm-misc-next-2018-11-28' of git://anongit.freedesktop.org/drm/drm-misc into drm-next
drm-misc-next for v4.21:
Core Changes:
- Merge drm_info.c into drm_debugfs.c
- Complete the fake drm_crtc_commit's hw_done/flip_done sooner.
- Remove deprecated drm_obj_ref/unref functions. All drivers use get/put now.
- Decrease stack use of drm_gem_prime_mmap.
- Improve documentation for dumb callbacks.
Driver Changes:
- Add edid support to virtio.
- Wait on implicit fence in meson and sun4i.
- Add support for BGRX8888 to sun4i.
- Preparation patches for sun4i driver to start supporting linear and tiled YUV formats.
- Add support for HDMI 1.4 4k modes to meson, and support for VIC alternate timings.
- Drop custom dumb_map in vkms.
- Small fixes and cleanups to v3d.
Signed-off-by: Dave Airlie <airlied@redhat.com>
From: Maarten Lankhorst <maarten.lankhorst@linux.intel.com>
Link: https://patchwork.freedesktop.org/patch/msgid/151a3270-b1be-ed75-bd58-6b29d741f592@linux.intel.com
Since retpoline capable compilers are widely available, make
CONFIG_RETPOLINE hard depend on the compiler capability.
Break the build when CONFIG_RETPOLINE is enabled and the compiler does not
support it. Emit an error message in that case:
"arch/x86/Makefile:226: *** You are building kernel with non-retpoline
compiler, please update your compiler.. Stop."
[dwmw: Fail the build with non-retpoline compiler]
Suggested-by: Peter Zijlstra <peterz@infradead.org>
Signed-off-by: Zhenzhong Duan <zhenzhong.duan@oracle.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Gleixner <tglx@linutronix.de>
Cc: David Woodhouse <dwmw@amazon.co.uk>
Cc: Borislav Petkov <bp@suse.de>
Cc: Daniel Borkmann <daniel@iogearbox.net>
Cc: H. Peter Anvin <hpa@zytor.com>
Cc: Konrad Rzeszutek Wilk <konrad.wilk@oracle.com>
Cc: Andy Lutomirski <luto@kernel.org>
Cc: Masahiro Yamada <yamada.masahiro@socionext.com>
Cc: Michal Marek <michal.lkml@markovi.net>
Cc: <srinivas.eeda@oracle.com>
Cc: stable@vger.kernel.org
Link: https://lkml.kernel.org/r/cca0cb20-f9e2-4094-840b-fb0f8810cd34@default
The kernel-doc attempts to clear the struct and struct member attributes
from the API documentation it produces. It falls short of the job in the
following respects:
- extra whitespaces are left where __attribute__((...)) was removed,
- only a single attribute is removed per struct,
- attributes (such as aligned) containing numbers were not removed,
- attributes are only cleared from struct fields, not structs themselves.
This patch addresses these issues by removing the attributes.
Signed-off-by: Sakari Ailus <sakari.ailus@linux.intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Jonathan Corbet <corbet@lwn.net>
The coccinelle script was used to rename some (deprecated) functions
which no longer exist now.
Signed-off-by: Fernando Ramos <greenfoo@gluegarage.com>
Reviewed-by: Linus Walleij <linus.walleij@linaro.org>
Acked-by: Julia Lawall <julia.lawall@lip6.fr>
Signed-off-by: Linus Walleij <linus.walleij@linaro.org>
Link: https://patchwork.freedesktop.org/patch/msgid/20181115221634.22715-9-greenfoo@gluegarage.com
Drop modpost command line switches that are no longer used by
makefile.modpost, upon request from Sam Ravnborg <sam@ravnborg.org>,
who wrote:
modpost is not supposed to be used outside the kernel build. [...]
I checked if there were any options supported by modpost that
was not configurable in Makefile.modpost.
And I could see that the -M and -K options in getopt() were leftovers.
The code that used these option was dropped in:
commit a8773769d1 ("Kbuild: clear marker out of modpost")
Could you add a patch that delete these on top of what you already have.
https://lore.kernel.org/lkml/20181020140835.GA3351@ravnborg.org/
Suggested-by: Sam Ravnborg <sam@ravnborg.org>
Signed-off-by: Paul Walmsley <paul.walmsley@sifive.com>
Signed-off-by: Paul Walmsley <paul@pwsan.com>
Acked-by: Sam Ravnborg <sam@ravnborg.org>
Signed-off-by: Masahiro Yamada <yamada.masahiro@socionext.com>
git-diff-index does not refresh the index for you, so using it for a
"-dirty" check can give misleading results. Commit 6147b1cf19
("scripts/setlocalversion: git: Make -dirty check more robust") tried to
fix this by switching to git-status, but it overlooked the fact that
git-status also writes to the .git directory of the source tree, which
is definitely not kosher for an out-of-tree (O=) build. That is getting
reverted.
Fortunately, git-status now supports avoiding writing to the index via
the --no-optional-locks flag, as of git 2.14. It still calculates an
up-to-date index, but it avoids writing it out to the .git directory.
So, let's retry the solution from commit 6147b1cf19 using this new
flag first, and if it fails, we assume this is an older version of git
and just use the old git-diff-index method.
It's hairy to get the 'grep -vq' (inverted matching) correct by stashing
the output of git-status (you have to be careful about the difference
betwen "empty stdin" and "blank line on stdin"), so just pipe the output
directly to grep and use a regex that's good enough for both the
git-status and git-diff-index version.
Cc: Christian Kujau <lists@nerdbynature.de>
Cc: Guenter Roeck <linux@roeck-us.net>
Suggested-by: Alexander Kapshuk <alexander.kapshuk@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Brian Norris <briannorris@chromium.org>
Tested-by: Genki Sky <sky@genki.is>
Signed-off-by: Masahiro Yamada <yamada.masahiro@socionext.com>
If an ARM mapping symbol shares an address with a valid symbol,
find_elf_symbol can currently return the mapping symbol instead, as the
symbol is not validated. This can result in confusing warnings:
WARNING: vmlinux.o(.text+0x18f4028): Section mismatch in reference
from the function set_reset_devices() to the variable .init.text:$x.0
This change adds a call to is_valid_name to find_elf_symbol, similarly
to how it's already used in find_elf_symbol2.
Signed-off-by: Sami Tolvanen <samitolvanen@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Masahiro Yamada <yamada.masahiro@socionext.com>
Without this change the following happens when using Python3 (3.6.6):
$ echo "GPL-2.0" | python3 scripts/spdxcheck.py -
FAIL: 'str' object has no attribute 'decode'
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "scripts/spdxcheck.py", line 253, in <module>
parser.parse_lines(sys.stdin, args.maxlines, '-')
File "scripts/spdxcheck.py", line 171, in parse_lines
line = line.decode(locale.getpreferredencoding(False), errors='ignore')
AttributeError: 'str' object has no attribute 'decode'
So as the line is already a string, there is no need to decode it and
the line can be dropped.
/usr/bin/python on Arch is Python 3. So this would indeed be worth
going into 4.19.
Link: http://lkml.kernel.org/r/20181023070802.22558-1-u.kleine-koenig@pengutronix.de
Signed-off-by: Uwe Kleine-König <u.kleine-koenig@pengutronix.de>
Cc: Thomas Gleixner <tglx@linutronix.de>
Cc: Joe Perches <joe@perches.com>
Cc: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@linuxfoundation.org>
Cc: <stable@vger.kernel.org>
Signed-off-by: Andrew Morton <akpm@linux-foundation.org>
Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@linux-foundation.org>
In today's merge_config.sh the order of the config fragment files dictates
the output of a config option. With this approach we will get different
.config files depending on the order of the config fragment files.
So doing something like:
$ ./merge/kconfig/merge_config.sh selftest.config drm.config
Where selftest.config defines DRM=y and drm.config defines DRM=m, the
result will be "DRM=m".
Rework to add a switch to get builtin '=y' precedence over modules '=m',
this will result in "DRM=y". If we do something like this:
$ ./merge/kconfig/merge_config.sh -y selftest.config drm.config
Suggested-by: Arnd Bergmann <arnd@arndb.de>
Signed-off-by: Anders Roxell <anders.roxell@linaro.org>
Signed-off-by: Masahiro Yamada <yamada.masahiro@socionext.com>
This commit points people who might otherwise code up something like
WARN_ON(!spin_is_locked(&mylock)) to lockdep_assert_held(&mylock).
Signed-off-by: Paul E. McKenney <paulmck@linux.ibm.com>
Cc: Andy Whitcroft <apw@canonical.com>
Cc: Joe Perches <joe@perches.com>
This patch creates a deprecated_apis map, which allows such APIs to
be flagged with suggested replacements more compactly and straightforwardly.
It also uses this map to flag the old flavorful RCU APIs as deprecated,
suggesting their vanilla-RCU counterparts as replacements.
Signed-off-by: Joe Perches <joe@perches.com>
Cc: Andy Whitcroft <apw@canonical.com>
Signed-off-by: Paul E. McKenney <paulmck@linux.ibm.com>
[ paulmck: Merged with earlier less-deft approach. ]
Commit 37c8a5fafa ("kbuild: consolidate Devicetree dtb build rules")
moved the location of 'dtbs_install' target which caused dtbs to not be
installed when building debian package with 'bindeb-pkg' target. Update
the builddeb script to use the same logic that determines if there's a
'dtbs_install' target which is presence of the arch dts directory. Also,
use CONFIG_OF_EARLY_FLATTREE instead of CONFIG_OF as that's a better
indication of whether we are building dtbs.
This commit will also have the side effect of installing dtbs on any
arch that has dts files. Previously, it was dependent on whether the
arch defined 'dtbs_install'.
Fixes: 37c8a5fafa ("kbuild: consolidate Devicetree dtb build rules")
Reported-by: Nuno Gonçalves <nunojpg@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Rob Herring <robh@kernel.org>
Signed-off-by: Masahiro Yamada <yamada.masahiro@socionext.com>
This reverts commit 6147b1cf19.
The reverted patch results in attempted write access to the source
repository, even if that repository is mounted read-only.
Output from "strace git status -uno --porcelain":
getcwd("/tmp/linux-test", 129) = 16
open("/tmp/linux-test/.git/index.lock", O_RDWR|O_CREAT|O_EXCL|O_CLOEXEC, 0666) =
-1 EROFS (Read-only file system)
While git appears to be able to handle this situation, a monitored
build environment (such as the one used for Chrome OS kernel builds)
may detect it and bail out with an access violation error. On top of
that, the attempted write access suggests that git _will_ write to the
file even if a build output directory is specified. Users may have the
reasonable expectation that the source repository remains untouched in
that situation.
Fixes: 6147b1cf19 ("scripts/setlocalversion: git: Make -dirty check more robust"
Cc: Genki Sky <sky@genki.is>
Signed-off-by: Guenter Roeck <linux@roeck-us.net>
Reviewed-by: Brian Norris <briannorris@chromium.org>
Signed-off-by: Masahiro Yamada <yamada.masahiro@socionext.com>
Since commit b41d920acf ("kbuild: deb-pkg: split generating packaging
and build"), the build version of the kernel contained in a deb package
is too low by 1.
Prior to the bad commit, the kernel was built first, then the number
in .version file was read out, and written into the debian control file.
Now, the debian control file is created before the kernel is actually
compiled, which is causing the version number mismatch.
Let the mkdebian script pass KBUILD_BUILD_VERSION=${revision} to require
the build system to use the specified version number.
Fixes: b41d920acf ("kbuild: deb-pkg: split generating packaging and build")
Reported-by: Doug Smythies <dsmythies@telus.net>
Signed-off-by: Masahiro Yamada <yamada.masahiro@socionext.com>
Tested-by: Doug Smythies <dsmythies@telus.net>
The current SED_CONFIG_EXP could match to comment lines in config
fragment files, especially when CONFIG_PREFIX_ is empty. For example,
Buildroot uses empty prefixing; starting symbols with BR2_ is just
convention.
Make the sed expression more robust against false positives from
comment lines. The new sed expression matches to only valid patterns.
Signed-off-by: Masahiro Yamada <yamada.masahiro@socionext.com>
Reviewed-by: Petr Vorel <petr.vorel@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Arnout Vandecappelle (Essensium/Mind) <arnout@mind.be>
Currently, function parameter description can match '@type.member'
expressions but fails to match '@type->member'.
Extend the $type_param regex to allow matching both
Signed-off-by: Mike Rapoport <rppt@linux.ibm.com>
Signed-off-by: Jonathan Corbet <corbet@lwn.net>
Ard Biesheuvel reports bindeb-pkg with O= option is broken in the
following way:
...
LD [M] sound/soc/rockchip/snd-soc-rk3399-gru-sound.ko
LD [M] sound/soc/rockchip/snd-soc-rockchip-pcm.ko
LD [M] sound/soc/rockchip/snd-soc-rockchip-rt5645.ko
LD [M] sound/soc/rockchip/snd-soc-rockchip-spdif.ko
LD [M] sound/soc/sh/rcar/snd-soc-rcar.ko
fakeroot -u debian/rules binary
make KERNELRELEASE=4.19.0-12677-g19beffaf7a99-dirty ARCH=arm64 KBUILD_SRC= intdeb-pkg
/bin/bash /home/ard/linux/scripts/package/builddeb
Makefile:600: include/config/auto.conf: No such file or directory
***
*** Configuration file ".config" not found!
***
*** Please run some configurator (e.g. "make oldconfig" or
*** "make menuconfig" or "make xconfig").
***
make[12]: *** [syncconfig] Error 1
make[11]: *** [syncconfig] Error 2
make[10]: *** [include/config/auto.conf] Error 2
make[9]: *** [__sub-make] Error 2
...
Prior to commit 80463f1b7b ("kbuild: add --include-dir flag only
for out-of-tree build"), both srctree and objtree were added to
--include-dir redundantly, and the wrong code '$MAKE image_name'
was working by relying on that. Now, the potential issue that had
previously been hidden just showed up.
'$MAKE image_name' recurses to the generated $(objtree)/Makefile and
ends up with running in srctree, which is incorrect. It should be
invoked with '-f $srctree/Makefile' (or KBUILD_SRC=) to be executed
in objtree.
Fixes: 80463f1b7b ("kbuild: add --include-dir flag only for out-of-tree build")
Reported-by: Ard Biesheuvel <ard.biesheuvel@linaro.org>
Signed-off-by: Masahiro Yamada <yamada.masahiro@socionext.com>
Tested-by: Ard Biesheuvel <ard.biesheuvel@linaro.org>
Zhenzhong Duan reported that running 'make O=/build/kernel binrpm-pkg'
failed with the following errors:
Running 'make O=/build/kernel binrpm-pkg' failed with below two errors.
Makefile:600: include/config/auto.conf: No such file or directory
+ cp make -C /mnt/root/kernel O=/build/kernel image_name make -f
/mnt/root/kernel/Makefile ...
cp: invalid option -- 'C'
Try 'cp --help' for more information.
Prior to commit 80463f1b7b ("kbuild: add --include-dir flag only
for out-of-tree build"), both srctree and objtree were added to
--include-dir redundantly, and the wrong code 'make image_name'
was working by relying on that. Now, the potential issue that had
previously been hidden just showed up.
'make image_name' recurses to the generated $(objtree)/Makefile and
ends up with running in srctree, which is incorrect. It should be
invoked with '-f $srctree/Makefile' (or KBUILD_SRC=) to be executed
in objtree.
Fixes: 80463f1b7b ("kbuild: add --include-dir flag only for out-of-tree build")
Reported-by: Zhenzhong Duan <zhenzhong.duan@oracle.com>
Signed-off-by: Masahiro Yamada <yamada.masahiro@socionext.com>
There is one more user of $(cc-name) in the top Makefile. It is supposed
to detect Clang before invoking Kconfig, so it should still be there
in the $(shell ...) form. All the other users of $(cc-name) have been
replaced with $(CONFIG_CC_IS_CLANG). Hence, scripts/Kbuild.include does
not need to define cc-name any more.
Signed-off-by: Masahiro Yamada <yamada.masahiro@socionext.com>
Evaluating cc-name invokes the compiler every time even when you are
not compiling anything, like 'make help'. This is not efficient.
The compiler type has been already detected in the Kconfig stage.
Use CONFIG_CC_IS_CLANG, instead.
Signed-off-by: Masahiro Yamada <yamada.masahiro@socionext.com>
Acked-by: Michael Ellerman <mpe@ellerman.id.au> (powerpc)
Acked-by: Paul Burton <paul.burton@mips.com> (MIPS)
Acked-by: Joel Stanley <joel@jms.id.au>
This is an effort to disentangle the include/linux/compiler*.h headers
and bring them up to date.
The main idea behind the series is to use feature checking macros
(i.e. __has_attribute) instead of compiler version checks (e.g. GCC_VERSION),
which are compiler-agnostic (so they can be shared, reducing the size
of compiler-specific headers) and version-agnostic.
Other related improvements have been performed in the headers as well,
which on top of the use of __has_attribute it has amounted to a significant
simplification of these headers (e.g. GCC_VERSION is now only guarding
a few non-attribute macros).
This series should also help the efforts to support compiling the kernel
with clang and icc. A fair amount of documentation and comments have also
been added, clarified or removed; and the headers are now more readable,
which should help kernel developers in general.
The series was triggered due to the move to gcc >= 4.6. In turn, this series
has also triggered Sparse to gain the ability to recognize __has_attribute
on its own.
Finally, the __nonstring variable attribute series has been also applied
on top; plus two related patches from Nick Desaulniers for unreachable()
that came a bit afterwards.
-----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE-----
iQIzBAABCgAdFiEEPjU5OPd5QIZ9jqqOGXyLc2htIW0FAlvNpywACgkQGXyLc2ht
IW1aiQ/+P8SJOa3GkiH37/nrIbk/wgMNytbs+gxE5YPaU1DP74Mn1prJ4XhQQic9
/mt8GnitZwzEHWdsGEUk+ZQwnIa7ZEAmpecbAF206AMRbNxa14T5YwBx4bqWFjZp
sP4zPTHt3JCKL8TM+z26o152UbF2kc4WSxHjEjSFaqEnR2E5D0MwFeGPzc8fgWmS
pNyn3CidzB0TS1UF008YXhiJO6HIhFNPyhPawlhwbbdsdlhZ4u0JmwfqP4EvjRFM
kyzdQ9CDe+AgTTD9Y8HhtoUClaa7SJzFWNzpKIJMWt8jpKWYZQ/+WtwKg2cf+v3M
uwktcs3RI1dYrjcITLz4VJ0oVaRFnyGgXvMP4yqWQx429hqnd09WXhMioXQ1htoI
H0vpPIAPsK+dqVA9sP3JzMq4h6+dE7P364lkbThbVpYAGKZ52qaLt9ixT1mw1Q9f
a683ji6o02IVOGUNZ/3KAb5MqdhewNEDdZILZYRfm4AL1Em3WW9QVtIosHPviLgc
16VjA02wKdxIcg+1LZMTNhfybztnSCf7SuQurpH1zEqFDGzrXwB7nYFplEY7DrrD
cqhOA1fMQa++oQR+D40QDoY2ybqPOyvJG7z17pvtt+6jXep4yy2a3Bxf+ClK0nto
5yT7v9ikXJr84FOkk7OvktLlAWvcykvAdfvDepBZhpqhuX82tHY=
=Y8WB
-----END PGP SIGNATURE-----
Merge tag 'compiler-attributes-for-linus-4.20-rc1' of https://github.com/ojeda/linux
Pull compiler attribute updates from Miguel Ojeda:
"This is an effort to disentangle the include/linux/compiler*.h headers
and bring them up to date.
The main idea behind the series is to use feature checking macros
(i.e. __has_attribute) instead of compiler version checks (e.g.
GCC_VERSION), which are compiler-agnostic (so they can be shared,
reducing the size of compiler-specific headers) and version-agnostic.
Other related improvements have been performed in the headers as well,
which on top of the use of __has_attribute it has amounted to a
significant simplification of these headers (e.g. GCC_VERSION is now
only guarding a few non-attribute macros).
This series should also help the efforts to support compiling the
kernel with clang and icc. A fair amount of documentation and comments
have also been added, clarified or removed; and the headers are now
more readable, which should help kernel developers in general.
The series was triggered due to the move to gcc >= 4.6. In turn, this
series has also triggered Sparse to gain the ability to recognize
__has_attribute on its own.
Finally, the __nonstring variable attribute series has been also
applied on top; plus two related patches from Nick Desaulniers for
unreachable() that came a bit afterwards"
* tag 'compiler-attributes-for-linus-4.20-rc1' of https://github.com/ojeda/linux:
compiler-gcc: remove comment about gcc 4.5 from unreachable()
compiler.h: update definition of unreachable()
Compiler Attributes: ext4: remove local __nonstring definition
Compiler Attributes: auxdisplay: panel: use __nonstring
Compiler Attributes: enable -Wstringop-truncation on W=1 (gcc >= 8)
Compiler Attributes: add support for __nonstring (gcc >= 8)
Compiler Attributes: add MAINTAINERS entry
Compiler Attributes: add Doc/process/programming-language.rst
Compiler Attributes: remove uses of __attribute__ from compiler.h
Compiler Attributes: KENTRY used twice the "used" attribute
Compiler Attributes: use feature checks instead of version checks
Compiler Attributes: add missing SPDX ID in compiler_types.h
Compiler Attributes: remove unneeded sparse (__CHECKER__) tests
Compiler Attributes: homogenize __must_be_array
Compiler Attributes: remove unneeded tests
Compiler Attributes: always use the extra-underscores syntax
Compiler Attributes: remove unused attributes
- Introduces the stackleak gcc plugin ported from grsecurity by Alexander
Popov, with x86 and arm64 support.
-----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE-----
Comment: Kees Cook <kees@outflux.net>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=Ks6B
-----END PGP SIGNATURE-----
Merge tag 'stackleak-v4.20-rc1' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/kees/linux
Pull stackleak gcc plugin from Kees Cook:
"Please pull this new GCC plugin, stackleak, for v4.20-rc1. This plugin
was ported from grsecurity by Alexander Popov. It provides efficient
stack content poisoning at syscall exit. This creates a defense
against at least two classes of flaws:
- Uninitialized stack usage. (We continue to work on improving the
compiler to do this in other ways: e.g. unconditional zero init was
proposed to GCC and Clang, and more plugin work has started too).
- Stack content exposure. By greatly reducing the lifetime of valid
stack contents, exposures via either direct read bugs or unknown
cache side-channels become much more difficult to exploit. This
complements the existing buddy and heap poisoning options, but
provides the coverage for stacks.
The x86 hooks are included in this series (which have been reviewed by
Ingo, Dave Hansen, and Thomas Gleixner). The arm64 hooks have already
been merged through the arm64 tree (written by Laura Abbott and
reviewed by Mark Rutland and Will Deacon).
With VLAs having been removed this release, there is no need for
alloca() protection, so it has been removed from the plugin"
* tag 'stackleak-v4.20-rc1' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/kees/linux:
arm64: Drop unneeded stackleak_check_alloca()
stackleak: Allow runtime disabling of kernel stack erasing
doc: self-protection: Add information about STACKLEAK feature
fs/proc: Show STACKLEAK metrics in the /proc file system
lkdtm: Add a test for STACKLEAK
gcc-plugins: Add STACKLEAK plugin for tracking the kernel stack
x86/entry: Add STACKLEAK erasing the kernel stack at the end of syscalls
with CONFIG_ environment variable.
merge_config.sh uses CONFIG_ which is used in kernel and other projects.
There are some projects which use kconfig with different prefixes (e.g.
buildroot: BR2_ prefix). CONFIG_ variable is already used for this
purpose in kconfig binary (scripts/kconfig/lkc.h), let's use the same
rule for in merge_config.sh.
Suggested-by: Masahiro Yamada <yamada.masahiro@socionext.com>
Signed-off-by: Petr Vorel <petr.vorel@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Masahiro Yamada <yamada.masahiro@socionext.com>
The last user of cc-fullversion was removed by commit f2910f0e68
("powerpc: remove old GCC version checks").
Signed-off-by: Masahiro Yamada <yamada.masahiro@socionext.com>
As commit 911a91c39c ("kconfig: rename silentoldconfig to
syncconfig") announced, it is time for the removal.
Signed-off-by: Masahiro Yamada <yamada.masahiro@socionext.com>
Acked-by: Jeff Kirsher <jeffrey.t.kirsher@intel.com>
As commit 312ee68752 ("kconfig: announce removal of oldnoconfig if
used") announced, it is time for the removal.
Signed-off-by: Masahiro Yamada <yamada.masahiro@socionext.com>
To minimize repetition, to allow for future rework, and to ensure
regularity of the various atomic APIs, we'd like to automatically
generate (the bulk of) a number of headers related to atomics.
This patch adds the infrastructure to do so, leaving actual conversion
of headers to subsequent patches. This infrastructure consists of:
* atomics.tbl - a table describing the functions in the atomics API,
with names, prototypes, and metadata describing the variants that
exist (e.g fetch/return, acquire/release/relaxed). Note that the
return type is dependent on the particular variant.
* atomic-tbl.sh - a library of routines useful for dealing with
atomics.tbl (e.g. querying which variants exist, or generating
argument/parameter lists for a given function variant).
* gen-atomic-fallback.sh - a script which generates a header of
fallbacks, covering cases where architecture omit certain functions
(e.g. omitting relaxed variants).
* gen-atomic-long.sh - a script which generates wrappers providing the
atomic_long API atomic of the relevant atomic or atomic64 API,
ensuring the APIs are consistent.
* gen-atomic-instrumented.sh - a script which generates atomic* wrappers
atop of arch_atomic* functions, with automatically generated KASAN
instrumentation.
* fallbacks/* - a set of fallback implementations for atomics, which
should be used when no implementation of a given atomic is provided.
These are used by gen-atomic-fallback.sh to generate fallbacks, and
these are also used by other scripts to determine the set of optional
atomics (as required to generate preprocessor guards correctly).
Fallbacks may use the following variables:
${atomic} atomic prefix: atomic/atomic64/atomic_long, which can be
used to derive the atomic type, and to prefix functions
${int} integer type: int/s64/long
${pfx} variant prefix, e.g. fetch_
${name} base function name, e.g. add
${sfx} variant suffix, e.g. _return
${order} order suffix, e.g. _relaxed
${atomicname} full name, e.g. atomic64_fetch_add_relaxed
${ret} return type of the function, e.g. void
${retstmt} a return statement (with a trailing space), unless the
variant returns void
${params} parameter list for the function declaration, e.g.
"int i, atomic_t *v"
${args} argument list for invoking the function, e.g. "i, v"
... for clarity, ${ret}, ${retstmt}, ${params}, and ${args} are
open-coded for fallbacks where these do not vary, or are critical to
understanding the logic of the fallback.
The MAINTAINERS entry for the atomic infrastructure is updated to cover
the new scripts.
There should be no functional change as a result of this patch.
Signed-off-by: Mark Rutland <mark.rutland@arm.com>
Signed-off-by: Peter Zijlstra (Intel) <peterz@infradead.org>
Cc: linux-arm-kernel@lists.infradead.org
Cc: catalin.marinas@arm.com
Cc: Will Deacon <will.deacon@arm.com>
Cc: linuxdrivers@attotech.com
Cc: dvyukov@google.com
Cc: Boqun Feng <boqun.feng@gmail.com>
Cc: arnd@arndb.de
Cc: aryabinin@virtuozzo.com
Cc: glider@google.com
Link: http://lkml.kernel.org/r/20180904104830.2975-2-mark.rutland@arm.com
Signed-off-by: Ingo Molnar <mingo@kernel.org>
- Remove unused fallback for BUILD_BUG_ON (which technically contains a VLA)
- Lift -Wvla to the top-level Makefile
-----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE-----
Comment: Kees Cook <kees@outflux.net>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=Vnw8
-----END PGP SIGNATURE-----
Merge tag 'vla-v4.20-rc1' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/kees/linux
Pull VLA removal from Kees Cook:
"Globally warn on VLA use.
This turns on "-Wvla" globally now that the last few trees with their
VLA removals have landed (crypto, block, net, and powerpc).
Arnd mentioned that there may be a couple more VLAs hiding in
hard-to-find randconfigs, but nothing big has shaken out in the last
month or so in linux-next.
We should be basically VLA-free now! Wheee. :)
Summary:
- Remove unused fallback for BUILD_BUG_ON (which technically contains
a VLA)
- Lift -Wvla to the top-level Makefile"
* tag 'vla-v4.20-rc1' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/kees/linux:
Makefile: Globally enable VLA warning
compiler.h: give up __compiletime_assert_fallback()
- optimize kallsyms slightly
- remove check for old CFLAGS usage
- add some compiler flags unconditionally instead of evaluating
$(call cc-option,...)
- fix variable shadowing in host tools
- refactor scripts/mkmakefile
- refactor various makefiles
-----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE-----
Version: GnuPG v1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=jM4E
-----END PGP SIGNATURE-----
Merge tag 'kbuild-v4.20' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/masahiroy/linux-kbuild
Pull Kbuild updates from Masahiro Yamada:
- optimize kallsyms slightly
- remove check for old CFLAGS usage
- add some compiler flags unconditionally instead of evaluating
$(call cc-option,...)
- fix variable shadowing in host tools
- refactor scripts/mkmakefile
- refactor various makefiles
* tag 'kbuild-v4.20' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/masahiroy/linux-kbuild:
modpost: Create macro to avoid variable shadowing
ASN.1: Remove unnecessary shadowed local variable
kbuild: use 'else ifeq' for checksrc to improve readability
kbuild: remove unneeded link_multi_deps
kbuild: add -Wno-unused-but-set-variable flag unconditionally
kbuild: add -Wdeclaration-after-statement flag unconditionally
kbuild: add -Wno-pointer-sign flag unconditionally
modpost: remove leftover symbol prefix handling for module device table
kbuild: simplify command line creation in scripts/mkmakefile
kbuild: do not pass $(objtree) to scripts/mkmakefile
kbuild: remove user ID check in scripts/mkmakefile
kbuild: remove VERSION and PATCHLEVEL from $(objtree)/Makefile
kbuild: add --include-dir flag only for out-of-tree build
kbuild: remove dead code in cmd_files calculation in top Makefile
kbuild: hide most of targets when running config or mixed targets
kbuild: remove old check for CFLAGS use
kbuild: prefix Makefile.dtbinst path with $(srctree) unconditionally
kallsyms: remove left-over Blackfin code
kallsyms: reduce size a little on 64-bit
Create DEF_FIELD_ADDR_VAR as a more generic version of the DEF_FIELD_ADD
macro, allowing usage of a variable name other than the struct element name.
Also, sets DEF_FIELD_ADDR as a specific usage of DEF_FILD_ADDR_VAR in which
the var name is the same as the struct element name.
Then, makes use of DEF_FIELD_ADDR_VAR to create a variable of another name,
in order to avoid variable shadowing.
Signed-off-by: Leonardo Bras <leobras.c@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Masahiro Yamada <yamada.masahiro@socionext.com>
Remove an unnecessary shadowed local variable (start).
It was used only once, with the same value it was started before
the if block.
Signed-off-by: Leonardo Bras <leobras.c@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Masahiro Yamada <yamada.masahiro@socionext.com>
Merge updates from Andrew Morton:
- a few misc things
- ocfs2 updates
- most of MM
* emailed patches from Andrew Morton <akpm@linux-foundation.org>: (132 commits)
hugetlbfs: dirty pages as they are added to pagecache
mm: export add_swap_extent()
mm: split SWP_FILE into SWP_ACTIVATED and SWP_FS
tools/testing/selftests/vm/map_fixed_noreplace.c: add test for MAP_FIXED_NOREPLACE
mm: thp: relocate flush_cache_range() in migrate_misplaced_transhuge_page()
mm: thp: fix mmu_notifier in migrate_misplaced_transhuge_page()
mm: thp: fix MADV_DONTNEED vs migrate_misplaced_transhuge_page race condition
mm/kasan/quarantine.c: make quarantine_lock a raw_spinlock_t
mm/gup: cache dev_pagemap while pinning pages
Revert "x86/e820: put !E820_TYPE_RAM regions into memblock.reserved"
mm: return zero_resv_unavail optimization
mm: zero remaining unavailable struct pages
tools/testing/selftests/vm/gup_benchmark.c: add MAP_HUGETLB option
tools/testing/selftests/vm/gup_benchmark.c: add MAP_SHARED option
tools/testing/selftests/vm/gup_benchmark.c: allow user specified file
tools/testing/selftests/vm/gup_benchmark.c: fix 'write' flag usage
mm/gup_benchmark.c: add additional pinning methods
mm/gup_benchmark.c: time put_page()
mm: don't raise MEMCG_OOM event due to failed high-order allocation
mm/page-writeback.c: fix range_cyclic writeback vs writepages deadlock
...
- Sync dtc with upstream version v1.4.7-14-gc86da84d30e4
- Work to get rid of direct accesses to struct device_node name and
type pointers in preparation for removing them. New helpers for
parsing DT cpu nodes and conversions to use the helpers. printk
conversions to %pOFn for printing DT node names. Most went thru
subystem trees, so this is the remainder.
- Fixes to DT child node lookups to actually be restricted to child
nodes instead of treewide.
- Refactoring of dtb targets out of arch code. This makes the support
more uniform and enables building all dtbs on c6x, microblaze, and
powerpc.
- Various DT binding updates for Renesas r8a7744 SoC
- Vendor prefixes for Facebook, OLPC
- Restructuring of some ARM binding docs moving some peripheral bindings
out of board/SoC binding files
- New "secure-chosen" binding for secure world settings on ARM
- Dual licensing of 2 DT IRQ binding headers
-----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE-----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=335v
-----END PGP SIGNATURE-----
Merge tag 'devicetree-for-4.20' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/robh/linux
Pull Devicetree updates from Rob Herring:
"A bit bigger than normal as I've been busy this cycle.
There's a few things with dependencies and a few things subsystem
maintainers didn't pick up, so I'm taking them thru my tree.
The fixes from Johan didn't get into linux-next, but they've been
waiting for some time now and they are what's left of what subsystem
maintainers didn't pick up.
Summary:
- Sync dtc with upstream version v1.4.7-14-gc86da84d30e4
- Work to get rid of direct accesses to struct device_node name and
type pointers in preparation for removing them. New helpers for
parsing DT cpu nodes and conversions to use the helpers. printk
conversions to %pOFn for printing DT node names. Most went thru
subystem trees, so this is the remainder.
- Fixes to DT child node lookups to actually be restricted to child
nodes instead of treewide.
- Refactoring of dtb targets out of arch code. This makes the support
more uniform and enables building all dtbs on c6x, microblaze, and
powerpc.
- Various DT binding updates for Renesas r8a7744 SoC
- Vendor prefixes for Facebook, OLPC
- Restructuring of some ARM binding docs moving some peripheral
bindings out of board/SoC binding files
- New "secure-chosen" binding for secure world settings on ARM
- Dual licensing of 2 DT IRQ binding headers"
* tag 'devicetree-for-4.20' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/robh/linux: (78 commits)
ARM: dt: relicense two DT binding IRQ headers
power: supply: twl4030-charger: fix OF sibling-node lookup
NFC: nfcmrvl_uart: fix OF child-node lookup
net: stmmac: dwmac-sun8i: fix OF child-node lookup
net: bcmgenet: fix OF child-node lookup
drm/msm: fix OF child-node lookup
drm/mediatek: fix OF sibling-node lookup
of: Add missing exports of node name compare functions
dt-bindings: Add OLPC vendor prefix
dt-bindings: misc: bk4: Add device tree binding for Liebherr's BK4 SPI bus
dt-bindings: thermal: samsung: Add SPDX license identifier
dt-bindings: clock: samsung: Add SPDX license identifiers
dt-bindings: timer: ostm: Add R7S9210 support
dt-bindings: phy: rcar-gen2: Add r8a7744 support
dt-bindings: can: rcar_can: Add r8a7744 support
dt-bindings: timer: renesas, cmt: Document r8a7744 CMT support
dt-bindings: watchdog: renesas-wdt: Document r8a7744 support
dt-bindings: thermal: rcar: Add device tree support for r8a7744
Documentation: dt: Add binding for /secure-chosen/stdout-path
dt-bindings: arm: zte: Move sysctrl bindings to their own doc
...
readability improvements for the formatted output, some LICENSES updates
including the addition of the ISC license, the removal of the unloved and
unmaintained 00-INDEX files, the deprecated APIs document from Kees, more
MM docs from Mike Rapoport, and the usual pile of typo fixes and
corrections.
-----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE-----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=C0wt
-----END PGP SIGNATURE-----
Merge tag 'docs-4.20' of git://git.lwn.net/linux
Pull documentation updates from Jonathan Corbet:
"This is a fairly typical cycle for documentation. There's some welcome
readability improvements for the formatted output, some LICENSES
updates including the addition of the ISC license, the removal of the
unloved and unmaintained 00-INDEX files, the deprecated APIs document
from Kees, more MM docs from Mike Rapoport, and the usual pile of typo
fixes and corrections"
* tag 'docs-4.20' of git://git.lwn.net/linux: (41 commits)
docs: Fix typos in histogram.rst
docs: Introduce deprecated APIs list
kernel-doc: fix declaration type determination
doc: fix a typo in adding-syscalls.rst
docs/admin-guide: memory-hotplug: remove table of contents
doc: printk-formats: Remove bogus kobject references for device nodes
Documentation: preempt-locking: Use better example
dm flakey: Document "error_writes" feature
docs/completion.txt: Fix a couple of punctuation nits
LICENSES: Add ISC license text
LICENSES: Add note to CDDL-1.0 license that it should not be used
docs/core-api: memory-hotplug: add some details about locking internals
docs/core-api: rename memory-hotplug-notifier to memory-hotplug
docs: improve readability for people with poorer eyesight
yama: clarify ptrace_scope=2 in Yama documentation
docs/vm: split memory hotplug notifier description to Documentation/core-api
docs: move memory hotplug description into admin-guide/mm
doc: Fix acronym "FEKEK" in ecryptfs
docs: fix some broken documentation references
iommu: Fix passthrough option documentation
...
Pull parisc updates from Helge Deller:
"Lots of small fixes and enhancements, most noteably:
- Many TLB and cache flush optimizations (Dave)
- Fixed HPMC/crash handler on 64-bit kernel (Dave and myself)
- Added alternative infrastructre. The kernel now live-patches itself
for various situations, e.g. replace SMP code when running on one
CPU only or drop cache flushes when system has no cache installed.
- vmlinuz now contains a full copy of the compressed vmlinux file.
This simplifies debugging the currently booted kernel.
- Unused driver removal (Christoph)
- Reduced warnings of Dino PCI bridge when running in qemu
- Removed gcc version check (Masahiro)"
* 'parisc-4.20-1' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/deller/parisc-linux: (23 commits)
parisc: Retrieve and display the PDC PAT capabilities
parisc: Optimze cache flush algorithms
parisc: Remove pte_inserted define
parisc: Add PDC PAT cell_info() and pd_get_pdc_revisions() functions
parisc: Drop two instructions from pte lookup code
parisc: Use zdep for shlw macro on PA1.1 and PA2.0
parisc: Add alternative coding infrastructure
parisc: Include compressed vmlinux file in vmlinuz boot kernel
extract-vmlinux: Check for uncompressed image as fallback
parisc: Fix address in HPMC IVA
parisc: Fix exported address of os_hpmc handler
parisc: Fix map_pages() to not overwrite existing pte entries
parisc: Purge TLB entries after updating page table entry and set page accessed flag in TLB handler
parisc: Release spinlocks using ordered store
parisc: Ratelimit dino stuck interrupt warnings
parisc: dino: Utilize DINO_MASK_IRQ() macro
parisc: Clean up crash header output
parisc: Add SYSTEM_INFO and REGISTER TOC PAT functions
parisc: Remove PTE load and fault check from L2_ptep macro
parisc: Reorder TLB flush timing calculation
...
Pull locking and misc x86 updates from Ingo Molnar:
"Lots of changes in this cycle - in part because locking/core attracted
a number of related x86 low level work which was easier to handle in a
single tree:
- Linux Kernel Memory Consistency Model updates (Alan Stern, Paul E.
McKenney, Andrea Parri)
- lockdep scalability improvements and micro-optimizations (Waiman
Long)
- rwsem improvements (Waiman Long)
- spinlock micro-optimization (Matthew Wilcox)
- qspinlocks: Provide a liveness guarantee (more fairness) on x86.
(Peter Zijlstra)
- Add support for relative references in jump tables on arm64, x86
and s390 to optimize jump labels (Ard Biesheuvel, Heiko Carstens)
- Be a lot less permissive on weird (kernel address) uaccess faults
on x86: BUG() when uaccess helpers fault on kernel addresses (Jann
Horn)
- macrofy x86 asm statements to un-confuse the GCC inliner. (Nadav
Amit)
- ... and a handful of other smaller changes as well"
* 'locking-core-for-linus' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/tip/tip: (57 commits)
locking/lockdep: Make global debug_locks* variables read-mostly
locking/lockdep: Fix debug_locks off performance problem
locking/pvqspinlock: Extend node size when pvqspinlock is configured
locking/qspinlock_stat: Count instances of nested lock slowpaths
locking/qspinlock, x86: Provide liveness guarantee
x86/asm: 'Simplify' GEN_*_RMWcc() macros
locking/qspinlock: Rework some comments
locking/qspinlock: Re-order code
locking/lockdep: Remove duplicated 'lock_class_ops' percpu array
x86/defconfig: Enable CONFIG_USB_XHCI_HCD=y
futex: Replace spin_is_locked() with lockdep
locking/lockdep: Make class->ops a percpu counter and move it under CONFIG_DEBUG_LOCKDEP=y
x86/jump-labels: Macrofy inline assembly code to work around GCC inlining bugs
x86/cpufeature: Macrofy inline assembly code to work around GCC inlining bugs
x86/extable: Macrofy inline assembly code to work around GCC inlining bugs
x86/paravirt: Work around GCC inlining bugs when compiling paravirt ops
x86/bug: Macrofy the BUG table section handling, to work around GCC inlining bugs
x86/alternatives: Macrofy lock prefixes to work around GCC inlining bugs
x86/refcount: Work around GCC inlining bug
x86/objtool: Use asm macros to work around GCC inlining bugs
...
'ifeq ... else ifeq ... endif' notation is supported by GNU Make 3.81
or later, which is the requirement for building the kernel since
commit 37d69ee308 ("docs: bump minimal GNU Make version to 3.81").
Use it to improve the readability.
Signed-off-by: Masahiro Yamada <yamada.masahiro@socionext.com>
Since commit c8589d1e9e ("kbuild: handle multi-objs dependency
appropriately"), $^ really represents all the prerequisite of the
composite object being built.
Hence, $(filter %.o,$^) contains all the objects to link together,
which is much simpler than link_multi_deps calculation.
Please note $(filter-out FORCE,$^) does not work here. When a single
object module is turned into a multi object module, $^ will contain
header files that were previously included for building the single
object, and recorded in the .*.cmd file. To filter out such headers,
$(filter %.o,$^) should be used here.
Signed-off-by: Masahiro Yamada <yamada.masahiro@socionext.com>
Blackfin and metag were the only architectures that prefix symbols with
an underscore. They were removed by commit 4ba66a9760 ("arch: remove
blackfin port"), commit bb6fb6dfcc ("metag: Remove arch/metag/"),
respectively.
It is no longer necessary to handle <prefix> part of module device
table symbols.
Signed-off-by: Masahiro Yamada <yamada.masahiro@socionext.com>
Make declaration type determination more robust.
When scripts/kernel-doc is deciding if some kernel-doc notation
contains an enum, a struct, a union, a typedef, or a function,
it does a pattern match on the beginning of the string, looking
for a match with one of "struct", "union", "enum", or "typedef",
and otherwise defaults to a function declaration type.
However, if a function or a function-like macro has a name that
begins with "struct" (e.g., struct_size()), then kernel-doc
incorrectly decides that this is a struct declaration.
Fix this by looking for the declaration type keywords having an
ending word boundary (\b), so that "struct_size" will not match
a struct declaration.
I compared lots of html before/after output from core-api, driver-api,
and networking. There were no differences in any of the files that
I checked.
Signed-off-by: Randy Dunlap <rdunlap@infradead.org>
Acked-by: Jani Nikula <jani.nikula@intel.com>
Tested-by: Kees Cook <keescook@chromium.org>
Signed-off-by: Jonathan Corbet <corbet@lwn.net>
As on x86-64 and other architectures, the boot kernel on parisc (vmlinuz
and bzImage) contains a full compressed copy of the final kernel
executable (vmlinux.bin.gz), which one should be able to extract with
the extract-vmlinux script.
But on parisc extracting the kernel with extract-vmlinux fails.
Currently the script first checks if the given file is an ELF file
(which is true on parisc) and if so returns it. Thus on parisc we
unexpectedly get back the vmlinuz boot file instead of the uncompressed
vmlinux image.
This patch fixes this issue by reverting the logic. It now first tries
to find a compression signature in the given file and if that fails it
checks the file itself as fallback.
Signed-off-by: Helge Deller <deller@gmx.de>
- Fix warnings from recordmcount.pl when building with Clang
- Allow Clang to use GNU toolchains correctly
- Disable CONFIG_SAMPLES for UML to avoid build error
-----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE-----
Version: GnuPG v1
iQIcBAABAgAGBQJbv2u8AAoJED2LAQed4NsGXUQQAIAZZ5KVqOuqsKcJvUbWEDAa
SnjBzcuRf6csyu1IgQ94BNRVX7BG5n2K55c6WRCDkP8kbUSKM7xODM0tv3imv9pF
3RBb3X9xnI+KdtxqRgrZdtZ1gFPgVJ2YGzHbKYMbjaLcO3sHLo1G2OLmi2ZEiG9d
ZFx7QSy/iKVDPXnfZoKEBasr1J8NzzYDEJKgYxuyEwNdEI3e8ZxicjERJMUoJvVG
J8YH+3xl1DMAZ33SGSIHcl6QPJWVCRpp3FblsnVbGYmROEqnf7jk8ThVHhffcYr7
AGCOV1q79pFsC80oo9AGrDQeNLfCM/LoXqPyvAxilCnxvN7A3lSEFKj8XGo2shC0
PCvM3DcISmbP6TLpJp/7VQ2MDxAPoA72LEvUa5F70BSrfAIjAje4Z0LuUfMrpWe0
0guY9pOvdpq1H0YKCLwf44n0CnlTT4t3S+lGRcO1dZyqPH6acAnt+V2BHgtMC084
SJvZiFJ1+cSyIzI7orB5yyVvSVj2vEM5Iyhwr6rSLQdQ9pYVn7+oWpA9rvR7CENJ
rFRt1+cs4q/aNDma67e/oSyZKYXYz+Fzq2f5OleDiCV4xAKLnH0tFg5hHIEFr7Cs
SC6rt6W6duutHrrqhB9kT0O5r/HCsV9MF875cQev1jQbxgC3VBdAi8UhL2T6BKfW
2PKwVF7ZyvVQ3nBPTIbT
=bOon
-----END PGP SIGNATURE-----
Merge tag 'kbuild-fixes-v4.19-2' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/masahiroy/linux-kbuild
Masahiro writes:
"Kbuild fixes for v4.19 (2nd)
- Fix warnings from recordmcount.pl when building with Clang
- Allow Clang to use GNU toolchains correctly
- Disable CONFIG_SAMPLES for UML to avoid build error"
* tag 'kbuild-fixes-v4.19-2' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/masahiroy/linux-kbuild:
samples: disable CONFIG_SAMPLES for UML
kbuild: allow to use GCC toolchain not in Clang search path
ftrace: Build with CPPFLAGS to get -Qunused-arguments
Assuming we never invoke the generated Makefile from outside of
the $(objtree) directory, $(CURDIR) points to the absolute path
of $(objtree).
BTW, 'lastword' is natively supported by GNU Make 3.81+, which
is the current requirement for building the kernel.
Signed-off-by: Masahiro Yamada <yamada.masahiro@socionext.com>
Since $(objtree) is always '.', it is not useful to pass it to
scripts/mkmakefile. I assume nobody wants to run this script directly.
Signed-off-by: Masahiro Yamada <yamada.masahiro@socionext.com>
This line was added by commit fd5f0cd6b0 ("kbuild: Do not overwrite
makefile as anohter user"). Its commit description says the intention
was to prevent $(objtree)/Makefile from being owned by root when e.g.
running 'make install'.
However, as commit 19514fc665 ("arm, kbuild: make "make install" not
depend on vmlinux") stated, installation targets must not modify the
source tree in the first place. If they do, we are already screwed up.
We must fix the root cause.
Installation targets should just copy files verbatim, hence we never
expect $(objtree)/Makefile is touched by root. The user ID check in
scripts/mkmakefile is unneeded.
Signed-off-by: Masahiro Yamada <yamada.masahiro@socionext.com>