String literals in __init functions

Joe Perches joe at perches.com
Wed Mar 25 11:01:57 PDT 2015


On Wed, 2015-03-25 at 18:56 +0100, Mason wrote:
> Hello everyone,
> 
> AFAIU, functions only used at system init are tagged __init to have
> the linker store them in a separate .init.text section, so memory can
> be reclaimed once initialization is complete. Is that correct?
> 
> The corresponding tag for data is __initdata (section .init.data)
> 
> I started wondering if the string literals used in an __init functions
> were automatically marked __initdata.
> 
> Looking at the objdump output, I see that the string literals are,
> in fact, stored in the .rodata section. I suppose that .rodata is NOT
> reclaimed after init?
> 
> This way seems to work:
> 
> static       char XyZa[] __initdata  = KERN_ALERT "foo";
> static const char XyZb[] __initconst = KERN_ALERT "bar";
> void __init XyZc(void) { printk(XyZa); printk(XyZb); }
> 
> $ arm-linux-gnueabihf-objdump -xd arch/arm/mach-tangox/time.o | grep XyZ
> 00000000 l     O .init.data	00000006 XyZa
> 00000000 l     O .init.rodata	00000006 XyZb
> 00000000 g     F .init.text	00000028 XyZc
> 00000000 <XyZc>:
> 
> $ arm-linux-gnueabihf-objdump -xd vmlinux | grep XyZ
> c021e360 l     O .init.data	00000006 XyZa
> c0220090 l     O .init.data	00000006 XyZb
> c020d928 g     F .init.text	00000028 XyZc
> c020d928 <XyZc>:
> 
> c020d928 <XyZc>:
> c020d928:       e1a0c00d        mov     ip, sp
> c020d92c:       e92dd800        push    {fp, ip, lr, pc}
> c020d930:       e24cb004        sub     fp, ip, #4
> c020d934:       e30e0360        movw    r0, #58208      ; 0xe360
> c020d938:       e34c0021        movt    r0, #49185      ; 0xc021
> c020d93c:       ebfe00c9        bl      c018dc68 <printk>
> c020d940:       e3000090        movw    r0, #144        ; 0x90
> c020d944:       e34c0022        movt    r0, #49186      ; 0xc022
> c020d948:       ebfe00c6        bl      c018dc68 <printk>
> c020d94c:       e89da800        ldm     sp, {fp, sp, pc}
> 
> Did I miss something in init.h?
> Or should it be done like above to reclaim string literals?

No, you didn't miss anything.

One proposal:

https://lkml.org/lkml/2014/8/21/255
> Regards.
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