[PATCH v2] arm: fix memset-related crashes caused by recent GCC (4.7.2) optimizations

Alexander Holler holler at ahsoftware.de
Sun Mar 10 13:41:46 EDT 2013


Am 10.03.2013 18:28, schrieb Russell King - ARM Linux:
> On Sun, Mar 10, 2013 at 06:06:11PM +0100, Alexander Holler wrote:
>> Am 07.03.2013 16:17, schrieb Russell King - ARM Linux:
>>> On Wed, Mar 06, 2013 at 08:15:17PM +0100, Dirk Behme wrote:
>>>> Am 11.02.2013 13:57, schrieb Ivan Djelic:
>>>>> Recent GCC versions (e.g. GCC-4.7.2) perform optimizations based on
>>>>> assumptions about the implementation of memset and similar functions.
>>>>> The current ARM optimized memset code does not return the value of
>>>>> its first argument, as is usually expected from standard implementations.
>>
>> I've just tried this patch with kernel 4.8.2 on an armv5-system where I
>> use gcc 4.7.2 since several months and where most parts of the system
>> are compiled with gcc 4.7.2 too.
>>
>> And I had at least one problem which manifested itself with
>
> Yes, the patch _is_ wrong.  Reverted.  I was trusting Nicolas' review
> of it, but the patch is definitely wrong.  Look carefully at this
> fragment of code:
>
> 1:      subs    r2, r2, #4              @ 1 do we have enough
>          blt     5f                      @ 1 bytes to align with?
>          cmp     r3, #2                  @ 1
>          strltb  r1, [ip], #1            @ 1
>          strleb  r1, [ip], #1            @ 1
>          strb    r1, [ip], #1            @ 1
>          add     r2, r2, r3              @ 1 (r2 = r2 - (4 - r3))
> /*
>   * The pointer is now aligned and the length is adjusted.  Try doing the
>   * memset again.
>   */
>
> ENTRY(memset)
> /*
>   * Preserve the contents of r0 for the return value.
>   */
>          mov     ip, r0
>          ands    r3, ip, #3              @ 1 unaligned?
>          bne     1b                      @ 1
>
> and consider what happens when 'r0' is not aligned to a word... We end
> up aligning the pointer in "1:" and then fall through into memset again
> which reloads the old misaligned pointer.

Thanks a lot for the very fast answer. I myself wasn't in the mood to go 
through arm-assembler (which I don't read that often), sorry.

Regards,

Alexander




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