From: Arvind Yadav
> Sent: 04 August 2016 17:53
> IS_ERR_VALUE() assumes that parameter is an unsigned long.
> It can not be used to check if 'unsigned int' is passed insted.
> Which tends to reflect an error.
> In 64bit architectures sizeof (int) == 4 && sizeof (long) == 8.
> IS_ERR_VALUE(x) is ((x) >= (unsigned long)-4095).
> IS_ERR_VALUE() of 'unsigned int' is always false because the 32bit
> value is zero extended to 64 bits.
> 
> Now Problem In UCC fast protocols -: drivers/soc/fsl/qe/ucc_fast.c
> 
>         /* Allocate memory for Tx Virtual Fifo */
>         uccf->ucc_fast_tx_virtual_fifo_base_offset =
>           qe_muram_alloc(uf_info->utfs, UCC_FAST_VIRT_FIFO_REGS_ALIGNMENT);
>         if (IS_ERR_VALUE(uccf->ucc_fast_tx_virtual_fifo_base_offset)) {
>                 printk(KERN_ERR "%s: cannot allocate MURAM for TX FIFO\n",
>                         __func__);
>                 uccf->ucc_fast_tx_virtual_fifo_base_offset = 0;
>                 ucc_fast_free(uccf);
>                 return -ENOMEM;
>         }
> 
>         /* Allocate memory for Rx Virtual Fifo */
>         uccf->ucc_fast_rx_virtual_fifo_base_offset =
>            qe_muram_alloc(uf_info->urfs +
>                            UCC_FAST_RECEIVE_VIRTUAL_FIFO_SIZE_FUDGE_FACTOR,
>                            UCC_FAST_VIRT_FIFO_REGS_ALIGNMENT);
>         if (IS_ERR_VALUE(uccf->ucc_fast_rx_virtual_fifo_base_offset)) {
>                 printk(KERN_ERR "%s: cannot allocate MURAM for RX FIFO\n",
>                         __func__);
>                 uccf->ucc_fast_rx_virtual_fifo_base_offset = 0;
>                 ucc_fast_free(uccf);
>                 return -ENOMEM;
>         }
> 
> qe_muram_alloc (a.k.a. cpm_muram_alloc) returns unsigned long.
> Return value store in a u32 (ucc_fast_tx_virtual_fifo_base_offset
> and ucc_fast_rx_virtual_fifo_base_offset).If qe_muram_alloc will
> return any error, Then IS_ERR_VALUE will always return 0. it'll not
> call ucc_fast_free for any failure. Inside 'if code' will be a dead
> code on 64bit.
> This patch is to avoid this problem on 64bit machine.

That is really far too wordy for a commit message.

My suspicion is that qe_muram_alloc() always returns a value that is much
less than 2^32 - even though the return type is 'long'.

Looking further all this code is a bag of worms.

The 'fail' return value from qe_muram_alloc() (aka cpm_muram_alloc()) is
never returned to an outer level.
It might be better to return a constant CPM_MURAL_ALLOC_FAIL (say 0x7fffffff)
and have the callers check that (via a #define).

That is only the start of the problems...

It looks very likely that cpm_muram_free() will be called in tidy up paths
when cpm_muram_alloc() either failed, or hasn't been called.
Since 0 is a valid return value, and there is no check for -ENOMEM it is
all an 'accident waiting to happen'.

>From my quick scan (grep -B2 -A6) I'm not at all sure most of the error paths
at best leak memory.

        David

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