On Wed, Apr 03, 2024 at 01:24:11PM +0400, Marc-André Lureau wrote:
> > > Unfortunately, it doesn't work in all cases. It seems to have issues
> > > with some guards:
> > > ../block/stream.c: In function ‘stream_run’:
> > > ../block/stream.c:216:12: error: ‘ret’ may be used uninitialized
> > > [-Werror=maybe-uninitialized]
> > >    216 |         if (ret < 0) {
> > >

That one looks like:

int ret;
WITH_GRAPH_RDLOCK_GUARD() {
  ret = ...;
}
if (copy) {
  ret = ...;
}
if (ret < 0)

I suspect the compiler is seeing the uncertainty possible from the
second conditional, and letting it take priority over the certainty
that the tweaked macro provided for the first conditional.

> > >
> >
> > So, updated macro helps in some cases, but doesn't help here? Intersting, 
> > why.
> >
> > > What should we do? change the macros + cherry-pick the missing
> > > false-positives, or keep this series as is?

An uglier macro, with sufficient comments as to why it is ugly (in
order to let us have fewer false positives where we have to add
initializers) may be less churn in the code base, but I'm not
necessarily sold on the ugly macro.  Let's see if anyone else
expresses an opinion.


> > >
> > >
> >
> > I think marco + missing is better. No reason to add dead-initializations in 
> > cases where new macros helps.
> 
> Ok
> 
> > Still, would be good to understand, what's the difference, why it help on 
> > some cases and not help in another.
> 
> I don't know, it's like if the analyzer was lazy for this particular
> case, although there is nothing much different from other usages.
> 
> If I replace:
> for (... *var2 = (void *)true; var2;
> with:
> for (... *var2 = (void *)true; var2 || true;
> 
> then it doesn't warn..

but it also doesn't work.  We want the body to execute exactly once,
not infloop.


> 
> Interestingly as well, if I change:
>     for (... *var2 = (void *)true; var2; var2 = NULL)
> for:
>     for (... *var2 = GML_OBJ_(); var2; var2 = NULL)
> 
> GML_OBJ_() simply being &(GraphLockable) { }), an empty compound
> literal, then it doesn't work, in all usages.

So the compiler is not figuring out that the compound literal is
sufficient for an unconditional one time through the for loop body.

What's worse, different compiler versions will change behavior over
time.  Making the code ugly to pacify a particular compiler, when that
compiler might improve in the future, is a form of chasing windmills.

> 
> All in all, I am not sure the trick of using var2 is really reliable either.

And that's my biggest argument for not making the macro not more
complex than it already is.

-- 
Eric Blake, Principal Software Engineer
Red Hat, Inc.
Virtualization:  qemu.org | libguestfs.org


Reply via email to