[PATCH v9 3/4] perf: xgene: Add APM X-Gene SoC Performance Monitoring Unit driver
Tai Tri Nguyen
ttnguyen at apm.com
Fri Jul 15 10:31:09 PDT 2016
Hi Mark and Joe,
On Fri, Jul 15, 2016 at 2:45 AM, Mark Rutland <mark.rutland at arm.com> wrote:
> On Thu, Jul 14, 2016 at 11:05:48AM -0700, Tai Tri Nguyen wrote:
>> Hi Joe,
>>
>> On Thu, Jul 14, 2016 at 10:54 AM, Tai Tri Nguyen <ttnguyen at apm.com> wrote:
>> > Hi Joe,
>> >
>> > On Thu, Jul 14, 2016 at 10:47 AM, Joe Perches <joe at perches.com> wrote:
>> >> On Thu, 2016-07-14 at 10:27 -0700, Tai Nguyen wrote:
>> >>> This patch adds a driver for the SoC-wide (AKA uncore) PMU hardware
>> >>> found in APM X-Gene SoCs.
>> >>
>> >> trivia:
>> >>
>> >>> diff --git a/drivers/perf/xgene_pmu.c b/drivers/perf/xgene_pmu.c
>> >> []
>> >>> +struct xgene_pmu_dev_ctx {
>> >>> + char *name;
>> >>> + struct list_head next;
>> >>> + struct xgene_pmu_dev *pmu_dev;
>> >>> + struct hw_pmu_info inf;
>> >>> +};
>> >>
>> >> Probably better to use something like
>> >> char name[20];
>> >> as the kasprintf can fail and this doesn't
>> >> seem to be freed anywhere.
>> >
>> > Okay. I'll fix it shortly.
>> >
>>
>> I take it back.
>> I refer many other drivers using kasprintf and they do the same way I do.
>> Can you please check it again?
>
> Joe is correct that you allocate a string with kasprintf, and this never
> gets freed, even if the driver is removed. Thus, memory may be leaked.
>
> If other drivers do the same, they are similarly wrong.
>
> Even if this is a rare case, it's not good practice to leave allocations
> unbalanced. So please fix this.
>
> If you don't want to change the struct, another option is to use
> devm_kasprintf. However, I suspect with all the accounting data
> structures that will take up more space.
>
Thanks, I will change to use devm_kasprintf because I don't want to
change the struct.
Regards,
--
Tai
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