[PATCH] ARM: move body of head-common.S back to text section
Dave P Martin
Dave.Martin at arm.com
Fri Jul 5 11:10:02 EDT 2013
On Wed, Jul 03, 2013 at 08:22:35PM -0400, Paul Gortmaker wrote:
> [Re: [PATCH] ARM: move body of head-common.S back to text section] On 03/07/2013 (Wed 18:20) Russell King - ARM Linux wrote:
>
> > On Wed, Jul 03, 2013 at 11:30:12AM -0400, Paul Gortmaker wrote:
> > > [Re: [PATCH] ARM: move body of head-common.S back to text section] On 03/07/2013 (Wed 11:00) Russell King - ARM Linux wrote:
> > >
> > > > On Wed, Jul 03, 2013 at 01:19:07AM -0400, Paul Gortmaker wrote:
> > > > > As an aside, I'm now thinking any __INIT that implicitly rely on EOF for
> > > > > closure are nasty traps waiting to happen and it might be worthwhile to
> > > > > audit and explicitly __FINIT them before someone appends to the file...
> > > >
> > > > That hides a different kind of bug though - I hate __FINIT for exactly
> > > > that reason. Consider this:
> > >
> > > Agreed - perhaps masking that it is a ".previous" just hides the fact
> > > that it is more like a pop operation vs. an on/off operation, or per
> > > function as we have in C.
> >
> > I read the info pages, because I thought it was a pop operation too.
> > I was concerned that .section didn't push the previous section onto the
> > stack.
> >
> > However, .popsection is the pseudio-op which pops. .previous just toggles
> > the current section with the section immediately before it.
> >
> > So:
> >
> > .text
> > .data
> > .previous
> > /* this is .text */
> > .previous
> > /* this is .data */
> > .previous
> > /* this is .text */
> > .previous
> > /* this is .data */
>
> Cool -- I bet we weren't the only ones thinking it was a pop. Thanks.
>
> Does that make __FINIT less evil than we previously assumed? I think
> your example was the following pseudo-patch:
>
>
> .text
> <some text>
> + .data
> + <some data>
> __INIT
> <big hunk of init>
> __FINIT
> /* this below used to be text */
> <more stuff that was originally meant for text>
>
> Even if it is a toggle (vs. pop), the end text will now become data,
> so the no-op __FINIT with an explicit section called out just below
> it may still be the most unambiguous way to indicate what is going on.
>
> >
> > > That seems reasonable to me. I can't think of any self auditing that is
> > > reasonably simple to implement. One downside of __FINIT as a no-op vs.
> > > what it is today, is that a dangling __FINIT in a file with no other
> > > previous sections will emit a warning. But that is a small low value
> > > corner case I think.
> >
> > That warning from __FINIT will only happen if there has been no section
> > or .text or .data statement in the file at all. As soon as you have any
> > statement setting any kind of section, .previous doesn't warn.
> >
> > So:
> >
> > .text
> > ...
> > __FINIT
> >
> > produces no warning.o
>
> Yep -- we are both saying the same thing here - hence why I called it a
> small low value corner case.
Note that .previous has another important gotcha. Consider:
__INIT
/* now in .text.init */
ALT_UP(...)
/* now in .text.init */
__FINIT
/* now in .alt.smp.text! */
.previous (or macros containing a dangling .previous) shouldn't be used
unless you're absolutely certain what the previous section was.
In general:
label:
<stuff>
.previous
restores to the section which was current at label, only if there are
no section directives in <stuff>, nor anything which could contain a
section directive after macro expansion.
The same goes for the hidden, dangling .previous embedded in __FINIT
and friends.
Cheers
---Dave
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