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author | Linus Torvalds <torvalds@linux-foundation.org> | 2010-10-28 16:18:59 -0700 |
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committer | Linus Torvalds <torvalds@linux-foundation.org> | 2010-10-28 16:18:59 -0700 |
commit | e596c79050eafea89cf9fe26b7a807643a2a9904 (patch) | |
tree | 36a0c9b0d4cb149c2c5098be2257639631e5d6c6 | |
parent | 51399a391940e676877c7a791138081f13a0bab7 (diff) | |
parent | 9231d9e02a1f92b52bbb1e4474bfd1903835a993 (diff) | |
download | kernel_samsung_smdk4412-e596c79050eafea89cf9fe26b7a807643a2a9904.tar.gz kernel_samsung_smdk4412-e596c79050eafea89cf9fe26b7a807643a2a9904.tar.bz2 kernel_samsung_smdk4412-e596c79050eafea89cf9fe26b7a807643a2a9904.zip |
Merge branch 'misc' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/mmarek/kbuild-2.6
* 'misc' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/mmarek/kbuild-2.6: (39 commits)
Revert "namespace: add source file location exceptions"
Coccinelle: Add contextual message
Coccinelle: Fix documentation
Coccinelle: Find doubled arguments to boolean or bit operators.
Coccinelle: Find nested lock+irqsave functions that use the same flags variables.
namespace: add source file location exceptions
scripts/extract-ikconfig: add support for bzip2, lzma and lzo
kbuild: check return value of asprintf()
scripts/namespace.pl: improve to get more correct results
scripts/namespace.pl: some bug fixes
scripts/namespace.pl: update file exclusion list
scripts/namespace.pl: fix wrong source path
Coccinelle: Use the -no_show_diff option for org and report mode
Coccinelle: Add a new mode named 'chain'
Coccinelle: Use new comment format to explain kfree.cocci
Coccinelle: Improve user information with a new kind of comment
Coccinelle: Update documentation
MAINTAINERS: Coccinelle: Update email address
Documentation/kbuild: modules.txt cleanup
Documentation/kbuild: major edit of modules.txt sections 5-8
...
29 files changed, 1597 insertions, 476 deletions
diff --git a/Documentation/coccinelle.txt b/Documentation/coccinelle.txt index cd2b0283706..4a276ea7001 100644 --- a/Documentation/coccinelle.txt +++ b/Documentation/coccinelle.txt @@ -24,6 +24,9 @@ of many distributions, e.g. : You can get the latest version released from the Coccinelle homepage at http://coccinelle.lip6.fr/ +Information and tips about Coccinelle are also provided on the wiki +pages at http://cocci.ekstranet.diku.dk/wiki/doku.php + Once you have it, run the following command: ./configure @@ -41,20 +44,22 @@ A Coccinelle-specific target is defined in the top level Makefile. This target is named 'coccicheck' and calls the 'coccicheck' front-end in the 'scripts' directory. -Four modes are defined: report, patch, context, and org. The mode to +Four modes are defined: patch, report, context, and org. The mode to use is specified by setting the MODE variable with 'MODE=<mode>'. +'patch' proposes a fix, when possible. + 'report' generates a list in the following format: file:line:column-column: message -'patch' proposes a fix, when possible. - 'context' highlights lines of interest and their context in a diff-like style.Lines of interest are indicated with '-'. 'org' generates a report in the Org mode format of Emacs. -Note that not all semantic patches implement all modes. +Note that not all semantic patches implement all modes. For easy use +of Coccinelle, the default mode is "chain" which tries the previous +modes in the order above until one succeeds. To make a report for every semantic patch, run the following command: @@ -68,9 +73,9 @@ To produce patches, run: The coccicheck target applies every semantic patch available in the -subdirectories of 'scripts/coccinelle' to the entire Linux kernel. +sub-directories of 'scripts/coccinelle' to the entire Linux kernel. -For each semantic patch, a changelog message is proposed. It gives a +For each semantic patch, a commit message is proposed. It gives a description of the problem being checked by the semantic patch, and includes a reference to Coccinelle. @@ -93,12 +98,35 @@ or make coccicheck COCCI=<my_SP.cocci> MODE=report + Using Coccinelle on (modified) files +~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ + +To apply Coccinelle on a file basis, instead of a directory basis, the +following command may be used: + + make C=1 CHECK="scripts/coccicheck" + +To check only newly edited code, use the value 2 for the C flag, i.e. + + make C=2 CHECK="scripts/coccicheck" + +This runs every semantic patch in scripts/coccinelle by default. The +COCCI variable may additionally be used to only apply a single +semantic patch as shown in the previous section. + +The "chain" mode is the default. You can select another one with the +MODE variable explained above. + +In this mode, there is no information about semantic patches +displayed, and no commit message proposed. + + Proposing new semantic patches ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ New semantic patches can be proposed and submitted by kernel developers. For sake of clarity, they should be organized in the -subdirectories of 'scripts/coccinelle/'. +sub-directories of 'scripts/coccinelle/'. Detailed description of the 'report' mode @@ -111,7 +139,7 @@ Example: Running - make coccicheck MODE=report COCCI=scripts/coccinelle/err_cast.cocci + make coccicheck MODE=report COCCI=scripts/coccinelle/api/err_cast.cocci will execute the following part of the SmPL script. @@ -149,7 +177,7 @@ identified. Example: Running - make coccicheck MODE=patch COCCI=scripts/coccinelle/err_cast.cocci + make coccicheck MODE=patch COCCI=scripts/coccinelle/api/err_cast.cocci will execute the following part of the SmPL script. @@ -193,7 +221,7 @@ NOTE: The diff-like output generated is NOT an applicable patch. The Example: Running - make coccicheck MODE=context COCCI=scripts/coccinelle/err_cast.cocci + make coccicheck MODE=context COCCI=scripts/coccinelle/api/err_cast.cocci will execute the following part of the SmPL script. @@ -228,7 +256,7 @@ diff -u -p /home/user/linux/crypto/ctr.c /tmp/nothing Example: Running - make coccicheck MODE=org COCCI=scripts/coccinelle/err_cast.cocci + make coccicheck MODE=org COCCI=scripts/coccinelle/api/err_cast.cocci will execute the following part of the SmPL script. diff --git a/Documentation/kbuild/modules.txt b/Documentation/kbuild/modules.txt index 0767cf69c69..3fb39e0116b 100644 --- a/Documentation/kbuild/modules.txt +++ b/Documentation/kbuild/modules.txt @@ -1,215 +1,185 @@ +Building External Modules -In this document you will find information about: -- how to build external modules -- how to make your module use the kbuild infrastructure -- how kbuild will install a kernel -- how to install modules in a non-standard location +This document describes how to build an out-of-tree kernel module. === Table of Contents === 1 Introduction - === 2 How to build external modules - --- 2.1 Building external modules - --- 2.2 Available targets - --- 2.3 Available options - --- 2.4 Preparing the kernel tree for module build - --- 2.5 Building separate files for a module - === 3. Example commands - === 4. Creating a kbuild file for an external module - === 5. Include files - --- 5.1 How to include files from the kernel include dir - --- 5.2 External modules using an include/ dir - --- 5.3 External modules using several directories - === 6. Module installation - --- 6.1 INSTALL_MOD_PATH - --- 6.2 INSTALL_MOD_DIR - === 7. Module versioning & Module.symvers - --- 7.1 Symbols from the kernel (vmlinux + modules) - --- 7.2 Symbols and external modules - --- 7.3 Symbols from another external module - === 8. Tips & Tricks - --- 8.1 Testing for CONFIG_FOO_BAR + === 2 How to Build External Modules + --- 2.1 Command Syntax + --- 2.2 Options + --- 2.3 Targets + --- 2.4 Building Separate Files + === 3. Creating a Kbuild File for an External Module + --- 3.1 Shared Makefile + --- 3.2 Separate Kbuild file and Makefile + --- 3.3 Binary Blobs + --- 3.4 Building Multiple Modules + === 4. Include Files + --- 4.1 Kernel Includes + --- 4.2 Single Subdirectory + --- 4.3 Several Subdirectories + === 5. Module Installation + --- 5.1 INSTALL_MOD_PATH + --- 5.2 INSTALL_MOD_DIR + === 6. Module Versioning + --- 6.1 Symbols From the Kernel (vmlinux + modules) + --- 6.2 Symbols and External Modules + --- 6.3 Symbols From Another External Module + === 7. Tips & Tricks + --- 7.1 Testing for CONFIG_FOO_BAR === 1. Introduction -kbuild includes functionality for building modules both -within the kernel source tree and outside the kernel source tree. -The latter is usually referred to as external or "out-of-tree" -modules and is used both during development and for modules that -are not planned to be included in the kernel tree. +"kbuild" is the build system used by the Linux kernel. Modules must use +kbuild to stay compatible with changes in the build infrastructure and +to pick up the right flags to "gcc." Functionality for building modules +both in-tree and out-of-tree is provided. The method for building +either is similar, and all modules are initially developed and built +out-of-tree. -What is covered within this file is mainly information to authors -of modules. The author of an external module should supply -a makefile that hides most of the complexity, so one only has to type -'make' to build the module. A complete example will be presented in -chapter 4, "Creating a kbuild file for an external module". +Covered in this document is information aimed at developers interested +in building out-of-tree (or "external") modules. The author of an +external module should supply a makefile that hides most of the +complexity, so one only has to type "make" to build the module. This is +easily accomplished, and a complete example will be presented in +section 3. -=== 2. How to build external modules +=== 2. How to Build External Modules -kbuild offers functionality to build external modules, with the -prerequisite that there is a pre-built kernel available with full source. -A subset of the targets available when building the kernel is available -when building an external module. +To build external modules, you must have a prebuilt kernel available +that contains the configuration and header files used in the build. +Also, the kernel must have been built with modules enabled. If you are +using a distribution kernel, there will be a package for the kernel you +are running provided by your distribution. ---- 2.1 Building external modules +An alternative is to use the "make" target "modules_prepare." This will +make sure the kernel contains the information required. The target +exists solely as a simple way to prepare a kernel source tree for +building external modules. - Use the following command to build an external module: +NOTE: "modules_prepare" will not build Module.symvers even if +CONFIG_MODVERSIONS is set; therefore, a full kernel build needs to be +executed to make module versioning work. - make -C <path-to-kernel> M=`pwd` +--- 2.1 Command Syntax - For the running kernel use: + The command to build an external module is: - make -C /lib/modules/`uname -r`/build M=`pwd` + $ make -C <path_to_kernel_src> M=$PWD - For the above command to succeed, the kernel must have been - built with modules enabled. + The kbuild system knows that an external module is being built + due to the "M=<dir>" option given in the command. - To install the modules that were just built: + To build against the running kernel use: - make -C <path-to-kernel> M=`pwd` modules_install + $ make -C /lib/modules/`uname -r`/build M=$PWD - More complex examples will be shown later, the above should - be enough to get you started. + Then to install the module(s) just built, add the target + "modules_install" to the command: ---- 2.2 Available targets + $ make -C /lib/modules/`uname -r`/build M=$PWD modules_install - $KDIR refers to the path to the kernel source top-level directory +--- 2.2 Options - make -C $KDIR M=`pwd` - Will build the module(s) located in current directory. - All output files will be located in the same directory - as the module source. - No attempts are made to update the kernel source, and it is - a precondition that a successful make has been executed - for the kernel. + ($KDIR refers to the path of the kernel source directory.) - make -C $KDIR M=`pwd` modules - The modules target is implied when no target is given. - Same functionality as if no target was specified. - See description above. + make -C $KDIR M=$PWD - make -C $KDIR M=`pwd` modules_install - Install the external module(s). - Installation default is in /lib/modules/<kernel-version>/extra, - but may be prefixed with INSTALL_MOD_PATH - see separate - chapter. + -C $KDIR + The directory where the kernel source is located. + "make" will actually change to the specified directory + when executing and will change back when finished. - make -C $KDIR M=`pwd` clean - Remove all generated files for the module - the kernel - source directory is not modified. + M=$PWD + Informs kbuild that an external module is being built. + The value given to "M" is the absolute path of the + directory where the external module (kbuild file) is + located. - make -C $KDIR M=`pwd` help - help will list the available target when building external - modules. +--- 2.3 Targets ---- 2.3 Available options: + When building an external module, only a subset of the "make" + targets are available. - $KDIR refers to the path to the kernel source top-level directory + make -C $KDIR M=$PWD [target] - make -C $KDIR - Used to specify where to find the kernel source. - '$KDIR' represent the directory where the kernel source is. - Make will actually change directory to the specified directory - when executed but change back when finished. + The default will build the module(s) located in the current + directory, so a target does not need to be specified. All + output files will also be generated in this directory. No + attempts are made to update the kernel source, and it is a + precondition that a successful "make" has been executed for the + kernel. - make -C $KDIR M=`pwd` - M= is used to tell kbuild that an external module is - being built. - The option given to M= is the directory where the external - module (kbuild file) is located. - When an external module is being built only a subset of the - usual targets are available. + modules + The default target for external modules. It has the + same functionality as if no target was specified. See + description above. - make -C $KDIR SUBDIRS=`pwd` - Same as M=. The SUBDIRS= syntax is kept for backwards - compatibility. + modules_install + Install the external module(s). The default location is + /lib/modules/<kernel_release>/extra/, but a prefix may + be added with INSTALL_MOD_PATH (discussed in section 5). ---- 2.4 Preparing the kernel tree for module build + clean + Remove all generated files in the module directory only. - To make sure the kernel contains the information required to - build external modules the target 'modules_prepare' must be used. - 'modules_prepare' exists solely as a simple way to prepare - a kernel source tree for building external modules. - Note: modules_prepare will not build Module.symvers even if - CONFIG_MODVERSIONS is set. Therefore a full kernel build - needs to be executed to make module versioning work. + help + List the available targets for external modules. ---- 2.5 Building separate files for a module - It is possible to build single files which are part of a module. - This works equally well for the kernel, a module and even for - external modules. - Examples (module foo.ko, consist of bar.o, baz.o): - make -C $KDIR M=`pwd` bar.lst - make -C $KDIR M=`pwd` bar.o - make -C $KDIR M=`pwd` foo.ko - make -C $KDIR M=`pwd` / - - -=== 3. Example commands - -This example shows the actual commands to be executed when building -an external module for the currently running kernel. -In the example below, the distribution is supposed to use the -facility to locate output files for a kernel compile in a different -directory than the kernel source - but the examples will also work -when the source and the output files are mixed in the same directory. +--- 2.4 Building Separate Files -# Kernel source -/lib/modules/<kernel-version>/source -> /usr/src/linux-<version> - -# Output from kernel compile -/lib/modules/<kernel-version>/build -> /usr/src/linux-<version>-up - -Change to the directory where the kbuild file is located and execute -the following commands to build the module: + It is possible to build single files that are part of a module. + This works equally well for the kernel, a module, and even for + external modules. - cd /home/user/src/module - make -C /usr/src/`uname -r`/source \ - O=/lib/modules/`uname-r`/build \ - M=`pwd` + Example (The module foo.ko, consist of bar.o and baz.o): + make -C $KDIR M=$PWD bar.lst + make -C $KDIR M=$PWD baz.o + make -C $KDIR M=$PWD foo.ko + make -C $KDIR M=$PWD / -Then, to install the module use the following command: - make -C /usr/src/`uname -r`/source \ - O=/lib/modules/`uname-r`/build \ - M=`pwd` \ - modules_install +=== 3. Creating a Kbuild File for an External Module -If you look closely you will see that this is the same command as -listed before - with the directories spelled out. +In the last section we saw the command to build a module for the +running kernel. The module is not actually built, however, because a +build file is required. Contained in this file will be the name of +the module(s) being built, along with the list of requisite source +files. The file may be as simple as a single line: -The above are rather long commands, and the following chapter -lists a few tricks to make it all easier. + obj-m := <module_name>.o +The kbuild system will build <module_name>.o from <module_name>.c, +and, after linking, will result in the kernel module <module_name>.ko. +The above line can be put in either a "Kbuild" file or a "Makefile." +When the module is built from multiple sources, an additional line is +needed listing the files: -=== 4. Creating a kbuild file for an external module + <module_name>-y := <src1>.o <src2>.o ... -kbuild is the build system for the kernel, and external modules -must use kbuild to stay compatible with changes in the build system -and to pick up the right flags to gcc etc. +NOTE: Further documentation describing the syntax used by kbuild is +located in Documentation/kbuild/makefiles.txt. -The kbuild file used as input shall follow the syntax described -in Documentation/kbuild/makefiles.txt. This chapter will introduce a few -more tricks to be used when dealing with external modules. +The examples below demonstrate how to create a build file for the +module 8123.ko, which is built from the following files: -In the following a Makefile will be created for a module with the -following files: 8123_if.c 8123_if.h 8123_pci.c 8123_bin.o_shipped <= Binary blob ---- 4.1 Shared Makefile for module and kernel +--- 3.1 Shared Makefile - An external module always includes a wrapper Makefile supporting - building the module using 'make' with no arguments. - The Makefile provided will most likely include additional - functionality such as test targets etc. and this part shall - be filtered away from kbuild since it may impact kbuild if - name clashes occurs. + An external module always includes a wrapper makefile that + supports building the module using "make" with no arguments. + This target is not used by kbuild; it is only for convenience. + Additional functionality, such as test targets, can be included + but should be filtered out from kbuild due to possible name + clashes. Example 1: --> filename: Makefile @@ -219,11 +189,11 @@ following files: 8123-y := 8123_if.o 8123_pci.o 8123_bin.o else - # Normal Makefile + # normal makefile + KDIR ?= /lib/modules/`uname -r`/build - KERNELDIR := /lib/modules/`uname -r`/build - all:: - $(MAKE) -C $(KERNELDIR) M=`pwd` $@ + default: + $(MAKE) -C $(KDIR) M=$$PWD # Module specific targets genbin: @@ -231,15 +201,20 @@ following files: endif - In example 1, the check for KERNELRELEASE is used to separate - the two parts of the Makefile. kbuild will only see the two - assignments whereas make will see everything except the two - kbuild assignments. + The check for KERNELRELEASE is used to separate the two parts + of the makefile. In the example, kbuild will only see the two + assignments, whereas "make" will see everything except these + two assignments. This is due to two passes made on the file: + the first pass is by the "make" instance run on the command + line; the second pass is by the kbuild system, which is + initiated by the parameterized "make" in the default target. + +--- 3.2 Separate Kbuild File and Makefile - In recent versions of the kernel, kbuild will look for a file named - Kbuild and as second option look for a file named Makefile. - Utilising the Kbuild file makes us split up the Makefile in example 1 - into two files as shown in example 2: + In newer versions of the kernel, kbuild will first look for a + file named "Kbuild," and only if that is not found, will it + then look for a makefile. Utilizing a "Kbuild" file allows us + to split up the makefile from example 1 into two files: Example 2: --> filename: Kbuild @@ -247,20 +222,21 @@ following files: 8123-y := 8123_if.o 8123_pci.o 8123_bin.o --> filename: Makefile - KERNELDIR := /lib/modules/`uname -r`/build - all:: - $(MAKE) -C $(KERNELDIR) M=`pwd` $@ + KDIR ?= /lib/modules/`uname -r`/build + + default: + $(MAKE) -C $(KDIR) M=$$PWD # Module specific targets genbin: echo "X" > 8123_bin.o_shipped + The split in example 2 is questionable due to the simplicity of + each file; however, some external modules use makefiles + consisting of several hundred lines, and here it really pays + off to separate the kbuild part from the rest. - In example 2, we are down to two fairly simple files and for simple - files as used in this example the split is questionable. But some - external modules use Makefiles of several hundred lines and here it - really pays off to separate the kbuild part from the rest. - Example 3 shows a backward compatible version. + The next example shows a backward compatible version. Example 3: --> filename: Kbuild @@ -269,13 +245,15 @@ following files: --> filename: Makefile ifneq ($(KERNELRELEASE),) + # kbuild part of makefile include Kbuild + else - # Normal Makefile + # normal makefile + KDIR ?= /lib/modules/`uname -r`/build - KERNELDIR := /lib/modules/`uname -r`/build - all:: - $(MAKE) -C $(KERNELDIR) M=`pwd` $@ + default: + $(MAKE) -C $(KDIR) M=$$PWD # Module specific targets genbin: @@ -283,260 +261,271 @@ following files: endif - The trick here is to include the Kbuild file from Makefile, so - if an older version of kbuild picks up the Makefile, the Kbuild - file will be included. + Here the "Kbuild" file is included from the makefile. This + allows an older version of kbuild, which only knows of + makefiles, to be used when the "make" and kbuild parts are + split into separate files. ---- 4.2 Binary blobs included in a module +--- 3.3 Binary Blobs - Some external modules needs to include a .o as a blob. kbuild - has support for this, but requires the blob file to be named - <filename>_shipped. In our example the blob is named - 8123_bin.o_shipped and when the kbuild rules kick in the file - 8123_bin.o is created as a simple copy off the 8213_bin.o_shipped file - with the _shipped part stripped of the filename. - This allows the 8123_bin.o filename to be used in the assignment to - the module. + Some external modules need to include an object file as a blob. + kbuild has support for this, but requires the blob file to be + named <filename>_shipped. When the kbuild rules kick in, a copy + of <filename>_shipped is created with _shipped stripped off, + giving us <filename>. This shortened filename can be used in + the assignment to the module. + + Throughout this section, 8123_bin.o_shipped has been used to + build the kernel module 8123.ko; it has been included as + 8123_bin.o. - Example 4: - obj-m := 8123.o 8123-y := 8123_if.o 8123_pci.o 8123_bin.o - In example 4, there is no distinction between the ordinary .c/.h files - and the binary file. But kbuild will pick up different rules to create - the .o file. + Although there is no distinction between the ordinary source + files and the binary file, kbuild will pick up different rules + when creating the object file for the module. + +--- 3.4 Building Multiple Modules + kbuild supports building multiple modules with a single build + file. For example, if you wanted to build two modules, foo.ko + and bar.ko, the kbuild lines would be: -=== 5. Include files + obj-m := foo.o bar.o + foo-y := <foo_srcs> + bar-y := <bar_srcs> -Include files are a necessity when a .c file uses something from other .c -files (not strictly in the sense of C, but if good programming practice is -used). Any module that consists of more than one .c file will have a .h file -for one of the .c files. + It is that simple! -- If the .h file only describes a module internal interface, then the .h file - shall be placed in the same directory as the .c files. -- If the .h files describe an interface used by other parts of the kernel - located in different directories, the .h files shall be located in - include/linux/ or other include/ directories as appropriate. -One exception for this rule is larger subsystems that have their own directory -under include/ such as include/scsi. Another exception is arch-specific -.h files which are located under include/asm-$(ARCH)/*. +=== 4. Include Files -External modules have a tendency to locate include files in a separate include/ -directory and therefore need to deal with this in their kbuild file. +Within the kernel, header files are kept in standard locations +according to the following rule: ---- 5.1 How to include files from the kernel include dir + * If the header file only describes the internal interface of a + module, then the file is placed in the same directory as the + source files. + * If the header file describes an interface used by other parts + of the kernel that are located in different directories, then + the file is placed in include/linux/. - When a module needs to include a file from include/linux/, then one - just uses: + NOTE: There are two notable exceptions to this rule: larger + subsystems have their own directory under include/, such as + include/scsi; and architecture specific headers are located + under arch/$(ARCH)/include/. - #include <linux/modules.h> +--- 4.1 Kernel Includes - kbuild will make sure to add options to gcc so the relevant - directories are searched. - Likewise for .h files placed in the same directory as the .c file. + To include a header file located under include/linux/, simply + use: - #include "8123_if.h" + #include <linux/module.h> - will do the job. + kbuild will add options to "gcc" so the relevant directories + are searched. ---- 5.2 External modules using an include/ dir +--- 4.2 Single Subdirectory - External modules often locate their .h files in a separate include/ - directory although this is not usual kernel style. When an external - module uses an include/ dir then kbuild needs to be told so. - The trick here is to use either EXTRA_CFLAGS (take effect for all .c - files) or CFLAGS_$F.o (take effect only for a single file). + External modules tend to place header files in a separate + include/ directory where their source is located, although this + is not the usual kernel style. To inform kbuild of the + directory, use either ccflags-y or CFLAGS_<filename>.o. - In our example, if we move 8123_if.h to a subdirectory named include/ - the resulting Kbuild file would look like: + Using the example from section 3, if we moved 8123_if.h to a + subdirectory named include, the resulting kbuild file would + look like: --> filename: Kbuild - obj-m := 8123.o + obj-m := 8123.o - EXTRA_CFLAGS := -Iinclude + ccflags-y := -Iinclude 8123-y := 8123_if.o 8123_pci.o 8123_bin.o - Note that in the assignment there is no space between -I and the path. - This is a kbuild limitation: there must be no space present. + Note that in the assignment there is no space between -I and + the path. This is a limitation of kbuild: there must be no + space present. ---- 5.3 External modules using several directories - - If an external module does not follow the usual kernel style, but - decides to spread files over several directories, then kbuild can - handle this too. +--- 4.3 Several Subdirectories + kbuild can handle files that are spread over several directories. Consider the following example: - | - +- src/complex_main.c - | +- hal/hardwareif.c - | +- hal/include/hardwareif.h - +- include/complex.h - - To build a single module named complex.ko, we then need the following + . + |__ src + | |__ complex_main.c + | |__ hal + | |__ hardwareif.c + | |__ include + | |__ hardwareif.h + |__ include + |__ complex.h + + To build the module complex.ko, we then need the following kbuild file: - Kbuild: + --> filename: Kbuild obj-m := complex.o complex-y := src/complex_main.o complex-y += src/hal/hardwareif.o - EXTRA_CFLAGS := -I$(src)/include - EXTRA_CFLAGS += -I$(src)src/hal/include + ccflags-y := -I$(src)/include + ccflags-y += -I$(src)/src/hal/include + As you can see, kbuild knows how to handle object files located + in other directories. The trick is to specify the directory + relative to the kbuild file's location. That being said, this + is NOT recommended practice. - kbuild knows how to handle .o files located in another directory - - although this is NOT recommended practice. The syntax is to specify - the directory relative to the directory where the Kbuild file is - located. + For the header files, kbuild must be explicitly told where to + look. When kbuild executes, the current directory is always the + root of the kernel tree (the argument to "-C") and therefore an + absolute path is needed. $(src) provides the absolute path by + pointing to the directory where the currently executing kbuild + file is located. - To find the .h files, we have to explicitly tell kbuild where to look - for the .h files. When kbuild executes, the current directory is always - the root of the kernel tree (argument to -C) and therefore we have to - tell kbuild how to find the .h files using absolute paths. - $(src) will specify the absolute path to the directory where the - Kbuild file are located when being build as an external module. - Therefore -I$(src)/ is used to point out the directory of the Kbuild - file and any additional path are just appended. -=== 6. Module installation +=== 5. Module Installation -Modules which are included in the kernel are installed in the directory: +Modules which are included in the kernel are installed in the +directory: - /lib/modules/$(KERNELRELEASE)/kernel + /lib/modules/$(KERNELRELEASE)/kernel/ -External modules are installed in the directory: +And external modules are installed in: - /lib/modules/$(KERNELRELEASE)/extra + /lib/modules/$(KERNELRELEASE)/extra/ ---- 6.1 INSTALL_MOD_PATH +--- 5.1 INSTALL_MOD_PATH - Above are the default directories, but as always, some level of - customization is possible. One can prefix the path using the variable - INSTALL_MOD_PATH: + Above are the default directories but as always some level of + customization is possible. A prefix can be added to the + installation path using the variable INSTALL_MOD_PATH: $ make INSTALL_MOD_PATH=/frodo modules_install - => Install dir: /frodo/lib/modules/$(KERNELRELEASE)/kernel - - INSTALL_MOD_PATH may be set as an ordinary shell variable or as in the - example above, can be specified on the command line when calling make. - INSTALL_MOD_PATH has effect both when installing modules included in - the kernel as well as when installing external modules. + => Install dir: /frodo/lib/modules/$(KERNELRELEASE)/kernel/ ---- 6.2 INSTALL_MOD_DIR + INSTALL_MOD_PATH may be set as an ordinary shell variable or, + as shown above, can be specified on the command line when + calling "make." This has effect when installing both in-tree + and out-of-tree modules. - When installing external modules they are by default installed to a - directory under /lib/modules/$(KERNELRELEASE)/extra, but one may wish - to locate modules for a specific functionality in a separate - directory. For this purpose, one can use INSTALL_MOD_DIR to specify an - alternative name to 'extra'. +--- 5.2 INSTALL_MOD_DIR - $ make INSTALL_MOD_DIR=gandalf -C KERNELDIR \ - M=`pwd` modules_install - => Install dir: /lib/modules/$(KERNELRELEASE)/gandalf + External modules are by default installed to a directory under + /lib/modules/$(KERNELRELEASE)/extra/, but you may wish to + locate modules for a specific functionality in a separate + directory. For this purpose, use INSTALL_MOD_DIR to specify an + alternative name to "extra." + $ make INSTALL_MOD_DIR=gandalf -C $KDIR \ + M=$PWD modules_install + => Install dir: /lib/modules/$(KERNELRELEASE)/gandalf/ -=== 7. Module versioning & Module.symvers -Module versioning is enabled by the CONFIG_MODVERSIONS tag. +=== 6. Module Versioning -Module versioning is used as a simple ABI consistency check. The Module -versioning creates a CRC value of the full prototype for an exported symbol and -when a module is loaded/used then the CRC values contained in the kernel are -compared with similar values in the module. If they are not equal, then the -kernel refuses to load the module. +Module versioning is enabled by the CONFIG_MODVERSIONS tag, and is used +as a simple ABI consistency check. A CRC value of the full prototype +for an exported symbol is created. When a module is loaded/used, the +CRC values contained in the kernel are compared with similar values in +the module; if they are not equal, the kernel refuses to load the +module. -Module.symvers contains a list of all exported symbols from a kernel build. +Module.symvers contains a list of all exported symbols from a kernel +build. ---- 7.1 Symbols from the kernel (vmlinux + modules) +--- 6.1 Symbols From the Kernel (vmlinux + modules) - During a kernel build, a file named Module.symvers will be generated. - Module.symvers contains all exported symbols from the kernel and - compiled modules. For each symbols, the corresponding CRC value - is stored too. + During a kernel build, a file named Module.symvers will be + generated. Module.symvers contains all exported symbols from + the kernel and compiled modules. For each symbol, the + corresponding CRC value is also stored. The syntax of the Module.symvers file is: - <CRC> <Symbol> <module> - Sample: + <CRC> <Symbol> <module> + 0x2d036834 scsi_remove_host drivers/scsi/scsi_mod - For a kernel build without CONFIG_MODVERSIONS enabled, the crc - would read: 0x00000000 + For a kernel build without CONFIG_MODVERSIONS enabled, the CRC + would read 0x00000000. Module.symvers serves two purposes: - 1) It lists all exported symbols both from vmlinux and all modules - 2) It lists the CRC if CONFIG_MODVERSIONS is enabled - ---- 7.2 Symbols and external modules - - When building an external module, the build system needs access to - the symbols from the kernel to check if all external symbols are - defined. This is done in the MODPOST step and to obtain all - symbols, modpost reads Module.symvers from the kernel. - If a Module.symvers file is present in the directory where - the external module is being built, this file will be read too. - During the MODPOST step, a new Module.symvers file will be written - containing all exported symbols that were not defined in the kernel. - ---- 7.3 Symbols from another external module - - Sometimes, an external module uses exported symbols from another - external module. Kbuild needs to have full knowledge on all symbols - to avoid spitting out warnings about undefined symbols. - Three solutions exist to let kbuild know all symbols of more than - one external module. - The method with a top-level kbuild file is recommended but may be - impractical in certain situations. - - Use a top-level Kbuild file - If you have two modules: 'foo' and 'bar', and 'foo' needs - symbols from 'bar', then one can use a common top-level kbuild - file so both modules are compiled in same build. - - Consider following directory layout: - ./foo/ <= contains the foo module - ./bar/ <= contains the bar module - The top-level Kbuild file would then look like: - - #./Kbuild: (this file may also be named Makefile) + 1) It lists all exported symbols from vmlinux and all modules. + 2) It lists the CRC if CONFIG_MODVERSIONS is enabled. + +--- 6.2 Symbols and External Modules + + When building an external module, the build system needs access + to the symbols from the kernel to check if all external symbols + are defined. This is done in the MODPOST step. modpost obtains + the symbols by reading Module.symvers from the kernel source + tree. If a Module.symvers file is present in the directory + where the external module is being built, this file will be + read too. During the MODPOST step, a new Module.symvers file + will be written containing all exported symbols that were not + defined in the kernel. + +--- 6.3 Symbols From Another External Module + + Sometimes, an external module uses exported symbols from + another external module. kbuild needs to have full knowledge of + all symbols to avoid spitting out warnings about undefined + symbols. Three solutions exist for this situation. + + NOTE: The method with a top-level kbuild file is recommended + but may be impractical in certain situations. + + Use a top-level kbuild file + If you have two modules, foo.ko and bar.ko, where + foo.ko needs symbols from bar.ko, you can use a + common top-level kbuild file so both modules are + compiled in the same build. Consider the following + directory layout: + + ./foo/ <= contains foo.ko + ./bar/ <= contains bar.ko + + The top-level kbuild file would then look like: + + #./Kbuild (or ./Makefile): obj-y := foo/ bar/ - Executing: - make -C $KDIR M=`pwd` + And executing + + $ make -C $KDIR M=$PWD - will then do the expected and compile both modules with full - knowledge on symbols from both modules. + will then do the expected and compile both modules with + full knowledge of symbols from either module. Use an extra Module.symvers file - When an external module is built, a Module.symvers file is - generated containing all exported symbols which are not - defined in the kernel. - To get access to symbols from module 'bar', one can copy the - Module.symvers file from the compilation of the 'bar' module - to the directory where the 'foo' module is built. - During the module build, kbuild will read the Module.symvers - file in the directory of the external module and when the - build is finished, a new Module.symvers file is created - containing the sum of all symbols defined and not part of the - kernel. - - Use make variable KBUILD_EXTRA_SYMBOLS in the Makefile - If it is impractical to copy Module.symvers from another - module, you can assign a space separated list of files to - KBUILD_EXTRA_SYMBOLS in your Makfile. These files will be - loaded by modpost during the initialisation of its symbol - tables. - -=== 8. Tips & Tricks - ---- 8.1 Testing for CONFIG_FOO_BAR - - Modules often need to check for certain CONFIG_ options to decide if - a specific feature shall be included in the module. When kbuild is used - this is done by referencing the CONFIG_ variable directly. + When an external module is built, a Module.symvers file + is generated containing all exported symbols which are + not defined in the kernel. To get access to symbols + from bar.ko, copy the Module.symvers file from the + compilation of bar.ko to the directory where foo.ko is + built. During the module build, kbuild will read the + Module.symvers file in the directory of the external + module, and when the build is finished, a new + Module.symvers file is created containing the sum of + all symbols defined and not part of the kernel. + + Use "make" variable KBUILD_EXTRA_SYMBOLS + If it is impractical to copy Module.symvers from + another module, you can assign a space separated list + of files to KBUILD_EXTRA_SYMBOLS in your build file. + These files will be loaded by modpost during the + initialization of its symbol tables. + + +=== 7. Tips & Tricks + +--- 7.1 Testing for CONFIG_FOO_BAR + + Modules often need to check for certain CONFIG_ options to + decide if a specific feature is included in the module. In + kbuild this is done by referencing the CONFIG_ variable + directly. #fs/ext2/Makefile obj-$(CONFIG_EXT2_FS) += ext2.o @@ -544,9 +533,9 @@ Module.symvers contains a list of all exported symbols from a kernel build. ext2-y := balloc.o bitmap.o dir.o ext2-$(CONFIG_EXT2_FS_XATTR) += xattr.o - External modules have traditionally used grep to check for specific - CONFIG_ settings directly in .config. This usage is broken. - As introduced before, external modules shall use kbuild when building - and therefore can use the same methods as in-kernel modules when - testing for CONFIG_ definitions. + External modules have traditionally used "grep" to check for + specific CONFIG_ settings directly in .config. This usage is + broken. As introduced before, external modules should use + kbuild for building and can therefore use the same methods as + in-tree modules when testing for CONFIG_ definitions. diff --git a/MAINTAINERS b/MAINTAINERS index d0c2206fd63..b60de4b2713 100644 --- a/MAINTAINERS +++ b/MAINTAINERS @@ -1613,7 +1613,7 @@ F: drivers/platform/x86/classmate-laptop.c COCCINELLE/Semantic Patches (SmPL) M: Julia Lawall <julia@diku.dk> M: Gilles Muller <Gilles.Muller@lip6.fr> -M: Nicolas Palix <npalix@diku.dk> +M: Nicolas Palix <npalix.work@gmail.com> L: cocci@diku.dk (moderated for non-subscribers) W: http://coccinelle.lip6.fr/ S: Supported diff --git a/scripts/basic/docproc.c b/scripts/basic/docproc.c index fc3b18d844a..98dec87974d 100644 --- a/scripts/basic/docproc.c +++ b/scripts/basic/docproc.c @@ -333,7 +333,10 @@ static void docsect(char *filename, char *line) if (*s == '\n') *s = '\0'; - asprintf(&s, "DOC: %s", line); + if (asprintf(&s, "DOC: %s", line) < 0) { + perror("asprintf"); + exit(1); + } consume_symbol(s); free(s); diff --git a/scripts/coccicheck b/scripts/coccicheck index b8bcf1f7bed..1bb1a1bd2da 100755 --- a/scripts/coccicheck +++ b/scripts/coccicheck @@ -16,6 +16,7 @@ if [ "$C" = "1" -o "$C" = "2" ]; then else ONLINE=0 FLAGS="-very_quiet" + OPTIONS="-dir $srctree" fi if [ ! -x "$SPATCH" ]; then @@ -25,11 +26,13 @@ fi if [ "$MODE" = "" ] ; then if [ "$ONLINE" = "0" ] ; then - echo 'You have not explicitly specify the mode to use. Fallback to "report".' + echo 'You have not explicitly specified the mode to use. Using default "chain" mode.' + echo 'All available modes will be tried (in that order): patch, report, context, org' echo 'You can specify the mode with "make coccicheck MODE=<mode>"' - echo 'Available modes are: report, patch, context, org' fi - MODE="report" + MODE="chain" +elif [ "$MODE" = "report" -o "$MODE" = "org" ] ; then + FLAGS="$FLAGS -no_show_diff" fi if [ "$ONLINE" = "0" ] ; then @@ -44,7 +47,7 @@ coccinelle () { OPT=`grep "Option" $COCCI | cut -d':' -f2` -# The option '-parse_cocci' can be used to syntaxically check the SmPL files. +# The option '-parse_cocci' can be used to syntactically check the SmPL files. # # $SPATCH -D $MODE $FLAGS -parse_cocci $COCCI $OPT > /dev/null @@ -52,21 +55,44 @@ coccinelle () { FILE=`echo $COCCI | sed "s|$srctree/||"` - echo "Processing `basename $COCCI` with option(s) \"$OPT\"" + echo "Processing `basename $COCCI`" + echo "with option(s) \"$OPT\"" + echo '' echo 'Message example to submit a patch:' - sed -e '/\/\/\//!d' -e 's|^///||' $COCCI - - echo ' The semantic patch that makes this change is available' + sed -ne 's|^///||p' $COCCI + + if [ "$MODE" = "patch" ] ; then + echo ' The semantic patch that makes this change is available' + elif [ "$MODE" = "report" ] ; then + echo ' The semantic patch that makes this report is available' + elif [ "$MODE" = "context" ] ; then + echo ' The semantic patch that spots this code is available' + elif [ "$MODE" = "org" ] ; then + echo ' The semantic patch that makes this Org report is available' + else + echo ' The semantic patch that makes this output is available' + fi echo " in $FILE." echo '' echo ' More information about semantic patching is available at' echo ' http://coccinelle.lip6.fr/' echo '' - $SPATCH -D $MODE $FLAGS -sp_file $COCCI $OPT -dir $srctree || exit 1 + if [ "`sed -ne 's|^//#||p' $COCCI`" ] ; then + echo 'Semantic patch information:' + sed -ne 's|^//#||p' $COCCI + echo '' + fi + fi + + if [ "$MODE" = "chain" ] ; then + $SPATCH -D patch $FLAGS -sp_file $COCCI $OPT $OPTIONS || \ + $SPATCH -D report $FLAGS -sp_file $COCCI $OPT $OPTIONS -no_show_diff || \ + $SPATCH -D context $FLAGS -sp_file $COCCI $OPT $OPTIONS || \ + $SPATCH -D org $FLAGS -sp_file $COCCI $OPT $OPTIONS -no_show_diff || exit 1 else - $SPATCH -D $MODE $FLAGS -sp_file $COCCI $OPT $OPTIONS || exit 1 + $SPATCH -D $MODE $FLAGS -sp_file $COCCI $OPT $OPTIONS || exit 1 fi } diff --git a/scripts/coccinelle/alloc/drop_kmalloc_cast.cocci b/scripts/coccinelle/api/alloc/drop_kmalloc_cast.cocci index 7d4771d449c..7d4771d449c 100644 --- a/scripts/coccinelle/alloc/drop_kmalloc_cast.cocci +++ b/scripts/coccinelle/api/alloc/drop_kmalloc_cast.cocci diff --git a/scripts/coccinelle/alloc/kzalloc-simple.cocci b/scripts/coccinelle/api/alloc/kzalloc-simple.cocci index 2eae828fc65..046b9b16f8f 100644 --- a/scripts/coccinelle/alloc/kzalloc-simple.cocci +++ b/scripts/coccinelle/api/alloc/kzalloc-simple.cocci @@ -1,5 +1,9 @@ /// -/// kzalloc should be used rather than kmalloc followed by memset 0 +/// Use kzalloc rather than kmalloc followed by memset with 0 +/// +/// This considers some simple cases that are common and easy to validate +/// Note in particular that there are no ...s in the rule, so all of the +/// matched code has to be contiguous /// // Confidence: High // Copyright: (C) 2009-2010 Julia Lawall, Nicolas Palix, DIKU. GPLv2. diff --git a/scripts/coccinelle/err_cast.cocci b/scripts/coccinelle/api/err_cast.cocci index 2ce115000af..2ce115000af 100644 --- a/scripts/coccinelle/err_cast.cocci +++ b/scripts/coccinelle/api/err_cast.cocci diff --git a/scripts/coccinelle/api/kstrdup.cocci b/scripts/coccinelle/api/kstrdup.cocci new file mode 100644 index 00000000000..e0805ad08d3 --- /dev/null +++ b/scripts/coccinelle/api/kstrdup.cocci @@ -0,0 +1,39 @@ +/// Use kstrdup rather than duplicating its implementation +/// +// Confidence: High +// Copyright: (C) 2010 Nicolas Palix, DIKU. GPLv2. +// Copyright: (C) 2010 Julia Lawall, DIKU. GPLv2. +// Copyright: (C) 2010 Gilles Muller, INRIA/LiP6. GPLv2. +// URL: http://coccinelle.lip6.fr/ +// Comments: +// Options: -no_includes -include_headers + +virtual patch + +@@ +expression from,to; +expression flag,E1,E2; +statement S; +@@ + +- to = kmalloc(strlen(from) + 1,flag); ++ to = kstrdup(from, flag); + ... when != \(from = E1 \| to = E1 \) + if (to==NULL || ...) S + ... when != \(from = E2 \| to = E2 \) +- strcpy(to, from); + +@@ +expression x,from,to; +expression flag,E1,E2,E3; +statement S; +@@ + +- x = strlen(from) + 1; + ... when != \( x = E1 \| from = E1 \) +- to = \(kmalloc\|kzalloc\)(x,flag); ++ to = kstrdup(from, flag); + ... when != \(x = E2 \| from = E2 \| to = E2 \) + if (to==NULL || ...) S + ... when != \(x = E3 \| from = E3 \| to = E3 \) +- memcpy(to, from, x); diff --git a/scripts/coccinelle/api/memdup.cocci b/scripts/coccinelle/api/memdup.cocci new file mode 100644 index 00000000000..b5d722077dc --- /dev/null +++ b/scripts/coccinelle/api/memdup.cocci @@ -0,0 +1,40 @@ +/// Use kmemdup rather than duplicating its implementation +/// +// Confidence: High +// Copyright: (C) 2010 Nicolas Palix, DIKU. GPLv2. +// Copyright: (C) 2010 Julia Lawall, DIKU. GPLv2. +// Copyright: (C) 2010 Gilles Muller, INRIA/LiP6. GPLv2. +// URL: http://coccinelle.lip6.fr/ +// Comments: +// Options: -no_includes -include_headers + +virtual patch + +@r1@ +expression from,to; +expression flag; +position p; +@@ + + to = \(kmalloc@p\|kzalloc@p\)(strlen(from) + 1,flag); + +@r2@ +expression x,from,to; +expression flag,E1; +position p; +@@ + + x = strlen(from) + 1; + ... when != \( x = E1 \| from = E1 \) + to = \(kmalloc@p\|kzalloc@p\)(x,flag); + +@@ +expression from,to,size,flag; +position p != {r1.p,r2.p}; +statement S; +@@ + +- to = \(kmalloc@p\|kzalloc@p\)(size,flag); ++ to = kmemdup(from,size,flag); + if (to==NULL || ...) S +- memcpy(to, from, size); diff --git a/scripts/coccinelle/api/memdup_user.cocci b/scripts/coccinelle/api/memdup_user.cocci new file mode 100644 index 00000000000..72ce012e878 --- /dev/null +++ b/scripts/coccinelle/api/memdup_user.cocci @@ -0,0 +1,35 @@ +/// Use kmemdup_user rather than duplicating its implementation +/// This is a little bit restricted to reduce false positives +/// +// Confidence: High +// Copyright: (C) 2010 Nicolas Palix, DIKU. GPLv2. +// Copyright: (C) 2010 Julia Lawall, DIKU. GPLv2. +// Copyright: (C) 2010 Gilles Muller, INRIA/LiP6. GPLv2. +// URL: http://coccinelle.lip6.fr/ +// Comments: +// Options: -no_includes -include_headers + +virtual patch + +@@ +expression from,to,size,flag; +position p; +identifier l1,l2; +@@ + +- to = \(kmalloc@p\|kzalloc@p\)(size,flag); ++ to = memdup_user(from,size); + if ( +- to==NULL ++ IS_ERR(to) + || ...) { + <+... when != goto l1; +- -ENOMEM ++ PTR_ERR(to) + ...+> + } +- if (copy_from_user(to, from, size) != 0) { +- <+... when != goto l2; +- -EFAULT +- ...+> +- } diff --git a/scripts/coccinelle/resource_size.cocci b/scripts/coccinelle/api/resource_size.cocci index 1935a58b39d..1935a58b39d 100644 --- a/scripts/coccinelle/resource_size.cocci +++ b/scripts/coccinelle/api/resource_size.cocci diff --git a/scripts/coccinelle/free/kfree.cocci b/scripts/coccinelle/free/kfree.cocci new file mode 100644 index 00000000000..f9f79d9245e --- /dev/null +++ b/scripts/coccinelle/free/kfree.cocci @@ -0,0 +1,117 @@ +/// Find a use after free. +//# Values of variables may imply that some +//# execution paths are not possible, resulting in false positives. +//# Another source of false positives are macros such as +//# SCTP_DBG_OBJCNT_DEC that do not actually evaluate their argument +/// +// Confidence: Moderate +// Copyright: (C) 2010 Nicolas Palix, DIKU. GPLv2. +// Copyright: (C) 2010 Julia Lawall, DIKU. GPLv2. +// Copyright: (C) 2010 Gilles Muller, INRIA/LiP6. GPLv2. +// URL: http://coccinelle.lip6.fr/ +// Comments: +// Options: -no_includes -include_headers + +virtual org +virtual report + +@free@ +expression E; +position p1; +@@ + +kfree@p1(E) + +@print expression@ +constant char *c; +expression free.E,E2; +type T; +position p; +identifier f; +@@ + +( + f(...,c,...,(T)E@p,...) +| + E@p == E2 +| + E@p != E2 +| + !E@p +| + E@p || ... +) + +@sz@ +expression free.E; +position p; +@@ + + sizeof(<+...E@p...+>) + +@loop exists@ +expression E; +identifier l; +position ok; +@@ + +while (1) { ... + kfree@ok(E) + ... when != break; + when != goto l; + when forall +} + +@r exists@ +expression free.E, subE<=free.E, E2; +expression E1; +iterator iter; +statement S; +position free.p1!=loop.ok,p2!={print.p,sz.p}; +@@ + +kfree@p1(E,...) +... +( + iter(...,subE,...) S // no use +| + list_remove_head(E1,subE,...) +| + subE = E2 +| + subE++ +| + ++subE +| + --subE +| + subE-- +| + &subE +| + BUG(...) +| + BUG_ON(...) +| + return_VALUE(...) +| + return_ACPI_STATUS(...) +| + E@p2 // bad use +) + +@script:python depends on org@ +p1 << free.p1; +p2 << r.p2; +@@ + +cocci.print_main("kfree",p1) +cocci.print_secs("ref",p2) + +@script:python depends on report@ +p1 << free.p1; +p2 << r.p2; +@@ + +msg = "reference preceded by free on line %s" % (p1[0].line) +coccilib.report.print_report(p2[0],msg) diff --git a/scripts/coccinelle/iterators/fen.cocci b/scripts/coccinelle/iterators/fen.cocci new file mode 100644 index 00000000000..77bc108c3f5 --- /dev/null +++ b/scripts/coccinelle/iterators/fen.cocci @@ -0,0 +1,64 @@ +/// These iterators only exit normally when the loop cursor is NULL, so there +/// is no point to call of_node_put on the final value. +/// +// Confidence: High +// Copyright: (C) 2010 Nicolas Palix, DIKU. GPLv2. +// Copyright: (C) 2010 Julia Lawall, DIKU. GPLv2. +// Copyright: (C) 2010 Gilles Muller, INRIA/LiP6. GPLv2. +// URL: http://coccinelle.lip6.fr/ +// Comments: +// Options: -no_includes -include_headers + +virtual patch + +@@ +iterator name for_each_node_by_name; +expression np,E; +identifier l; +@@ + +for_each_node_by_name(np,...) { + ... when != break; + when != goto l; +} +... when != np = E +- of_node_put(np); + +@@ +iterator name for_each_node_by_type; +expression np,E; +identifier l; +@@ + +for_each_node_by_type(np,...) { + ... when != break; + when != goto l; +} +... when != np = E +- of_node_put(np); + +@@ +iterator name for_each_compatible_node; +expression np,E; +identifier l; +@@ + +for_each_compatible_node(np,...) { + ... when != break; + when != goto l; +} +... when != np = E +- of_node_put(np); + +@@ +iterator name for_each_matching_node; +expression np,E; +identifier l; +@@ + +for_each_matching_node(np,...) { + ... when != break; + when != goto l; +} +... when != np = E +- of_node_put(np); diff --git a/scripts/coccinelle/iterators/itnull.cocci b/scripts/coccinelle/iterators/itnull.cocci new file mode 100644 index 00000000000..baa4297a4ed --- /dev/null +++ b/scripts/coccinelle/iterators/itnull.cocci @@ -0,0 +1,58 @@ +/// Many iterators have the property that the first argument is always bound +/// to a real list element, never NULL. False positives arise for some +/// iterators that do not have this property, or in cases when the loop +/// cursor is reassigned. The latter should only happen when the matched +/// code is on the way to a loop exit (break, goto, or return). +/// +// Confidence: Moderate +// Copyright: (C) 2010 Nicolas Palix, DIKU. GPLv2. +// Copyright: (C) 2010 Julia Lawall, DIKU. GPLv2. +// Copyright: (C) 2010 Gilles Muller, INRIA/LiP6. GPLv2. +// URL: http://coccinelle.lip6.fr/ +// Comments: +// Options: -no_includes -include_headers + +virtual patch + +@@ +iterator I; +expression x,E,E1,E2; +statement S,S1,S2; +@@ + +I(x,...) { <... +( +- if (x == NULL && ...) S +| +- if (x != NULL || ...) + S +| +- (x == NULL) || + E +| +- (x != NULL) && + E +| +- (x == NULL && ...) ? E1 : + E2 +| +- (x != NULL || ...) ? + E1 +- : E2 +| +- if (x == NULL && ...) S1 else + S2 +| +- if (x != NULL || ...) + S1 +- else S2 +| ++ BAD( + x == NULL ++ ) +| ++ BAD( + x != NULL ++ ) +) + ...> }
\ No newline at end of file diff --git a/scripts/coccinelle/iterators/list_entry_update.cocci b/scripts/coccinelle/iterators/list_entry_update.cocci new file mode 100644 index 00000000000..b2967475679 --- /dev/null +++ b/scripts/coccinelle/iterators/list_entry_update.cocci @@ -0,0 +1,62 @@ +/// list_for_each_entry uses its first argument to get from one element of +/// the list to the next, so it is usually not a good idea to reassign it. +/// The first rule finds such a reassignment and the second rule checks +/// that there is a path from the reassignment back to the top of the loop. +/// +// Confidence: High +// Copyright: (C) 2010 Nicolas Palix, DIKU. GPLv2. +// Copyright: (C) 2010 Julia Lawall, DIKU. GPLv2. +// Copyright: (C) 2010 Gilles Muller, INRIA/LiP6. GPLv2. +// URL: http://coccinelle.lip6.fr/ +// Comments: +// Options: -no_includes -include_headers + +virtual context +virtual org +virtual report + +@r@ +iterator name list_for_each_entry; +expression x,E; +position p1,p2; +@@ + +list_for_each_entry@p1(x,...) { <... x =@p2 E ...> } + +@depends on context && !org && !report@ +expression x,E; +position r.p1,r.p2; +statement S; +@@ + +*x =@p2 E +... +list_for_each_entry@p1(x,...) S + +// ------------------------------------------------------------------------ + +@back depends on (org || report) && !context exists@ +expression x,E; +position r.p1,r.p2; +statement S; +@@ + +x =@p2 E +... +list_for_each_entry@p1(x,...) S + +@script:python depends on back && org@ +p1 << r.p1; +p2 << r.p2; +@@ + +cocci.print_main("iterator",p1) +cocci.print_secs("update",p2) + +@script:python depends on back && report@ +p1 << r.p1; +p2 << r.p2; +@@ + +msg = "iterator with update on line %s" % (p2[0].line) +coccilib.report.print_report(p1[0],msg) diff --git a/scripts/coccinelle/locks/call_kern.cocci b/scripts/coccinelle/locks/call_kern.cocci new file mode 100644 index 00000000000..00af5344a68 --- /dev/null +++ b/scripts/coccinelle/locks/call_kern.cocci @@ -0,0 +1,74 @@ +/// Find functions that refer to GFP_KERNEL but are called with locks held. +/// The proposed change of converting the GFP_KERNEL is not necessarily the +/// correct one. It may be desired to unlock the lock, or to not call the +/// function under the lock in the first place. +/// +// Confidence: Moderate +// Copyright: (C) 2010 Nicolas Palix, DIKU. GPLv2. +// Copyright: (C) 2010 Julia Lawall, DIKU. GPLv2. +// Copyright: (C) 2010 Gilles Muller, INRIA/LiP6. GPLv2. +// URL: http://coccinelle.lip6.fr/ +// Comments: +// Options: -no_includes -include_headers + +virtual patch + +@gfp exists@ +identifier fn; +position p; +@@ + +fn(...) { + ... when != read_unlock_irq(...) + when != write_unlock_irq(...) + when != read_unlock_irqrestore(...) + when != write_unlock_irqrestore(...) + when != spin_unlock(...) + when != spin_unlock_irq(...) + when != spin_unlock_irqrestore(...) + when != local_irq_enable(...) + when any + GFP_KERNEL@p + ... when any +} + +@locked@ +identifier gfp.fn; +@@ + +( +read_lock_irq +| +write_lock_irq +| +read_lock_irqsave +| +write_lock_irqsave +| +spin_lock +| +spin_trylock +| +spin_lock_irq +| +spin_lock_irqsave +| +local_irq_disable +) + (...) +... when != read_unlock_irq(...) + when != write_unlock_irq(...) + when != read_unlock_irqrestore(...) + when != write_unlock_irqrestore(...) + when != spin_unlock(...) + when != spin_unlock_irq(...) + when != spin_unlock_irqrestore(...) + when != local_irq_enable(...) +fn(...) + +@depends on locked@ +position gfp.p; +@@ + +- GFP_KERNEL@p ++ GFP_ATOMIC diff --git a/scripts/coccinelle/locks/double_lock.cocci b/scripts/coccinelle/locks/double_lock.cocci new file mode 100644 index 00000000000..63b24e682fa --- /dev/null +++ b/scripts/coccinelle/locks/double_lock.cocci @@ -0,0 +1,92 @@ +/// Find double locks. False positives may occur when some paths cannot +/// occur at execution, due to the values of variables, and when there is +/// an intervening function call that releases the lock. +/// +// Confidence: Moderate +// Copyright: (C) 2010 Nicolas Palix, DIKU. GPLv2. +// Copyright: (C) 2010 Julia Lawall, DIKU. GPLv2. +// Copyright: (C) 2010 Gilles Muller, INRIA/LiP6. GPLv2. +// URL: http://coccinelle.lip6.fr/ +// Comments: +// Options: -no_includes -include_headers + +virtual org +virtual report + +@locked@ +position p1; +expression E1; +position p; +@@ + +( +mutex_lock@p1 +| +mutex_trylock@p1 +| +spin_lock@p1 +| +spin_trylock@p1 +| +read_lock@p1 +| +read_trylock@p1 +| +write_lock@p1 +| +write_trylock@p1 +) (E1@p,...); + +@balanced@ +position p1 != locked.p1; +position locked.p; +identifier lock,unlock; +expression x <= locked.E1; +expression E,locked.E1; +expression E2; +@@ + +if (E) { + <+... when != E1 + lock(E1@p,...) + ...+> +} +... when != E1 + when != \(x = E2\|&x\) + when forall +if (E) { + <+... when != E1 + unlock@p1(E1,...) + ...+> +} + +@r depends on !balanced exists@ +expression x <= locked.E1; +expression locked.E1; +expression E2; +identifier lock; +position locked.p,p1,p2; +@@ + +lock@p1 (E1@p,...); +... when != E1 + when != \(x = E2\|&x\) +lock@p2 (E1,...); + +@script:python depends on org@ +p1 << r.p1; +p2 << r.p2; +lock << r.lock; +@@ + +cocci.print_main(lock,p1) +cocci.print_secs("second lock",p2) + +@script:python depends on report@ +p1 << r.p1; +p2 << r.p2; +lock << r.lock; +@@ + +msg = "second lock on line %s" % (p2[0].line) +coccilib.report.print_report(p1[0],msg) diff --git a/scripts/coccinelle/locks/flags.cocci b/scripts/coccinelle/locks/flags.cocci new file mode 100644 index 00000000000..b4344d83809 --- /dev/null +++ b/scripts/coccinelle/locks/flags.cocci @@ -0,0 +1,80 @@ +/// Find nested lock+irqsave functions that use the same flags variables +/// +// Confidence: High +// Copyright: (C) 2010 Nicolas Palix, DIKU. GPLv2. +// Copyright: (C) 2010 Julia Lawall, DIKU. GPLv2. +// Copyright: (C) 2010 Gilles Muller, INRIA/LiP6. GPLv2. +// URL: http://coccinelle.lip6.fr/ +// Comments: +// Options: -no_includes -include_headers + +virtual context +virtual org +virtual report + +@r@ +expression lock1,lock2,flags; +position p1,p2; +@@ + +( +spin_lock_irqsave@p1(lock1,flags) +| +read_lock_irqsave@p1(lock1,flags) +| +write_lock_irqsave@p1(lock1,flags) +) +... when != flags +( +spin_lock_irqsave(lock1,flags) +| +read_lock_irqsave(lock1,flags) +| +write_lock_irqsave(lock1,flags) +| +spin_lock_irqsave@p2(lock2,flags) +| +read_lock_irqsave@p2(lock2,flags) +| +write_lock_irqsave@p2(lock2,flags) +) + +@d@ +expression f <= r.flags; +expression lock1,lock2,flags; +position r.p1, r.p2; +@@ + +( +*spin_lock_irqsave@p1(lock1,flags) +| +*read_lock_irqsave@p1(lock1,flags) +| +*write_lock_irqsave@p1(lock1,flags) +) +... when != f +( +*spin_lock_irqsave@p2(lock2,flags) +| +*read_lock_irqsave@p2(lock2,flags) +| +*write_lock_irqsave@p2(lock2,flags) +) + +// ---------------------------------------------------------------------- + +@script:python depends on d && org@ +p1 << r.p1; +p2 << r.p2; +@@ + +cocci.print_main("original lock",p1) +cocci.print_secs("nested lock+irqsave that reuses flags",p2) + +@script:python depends on d && report@ +p1 << r.p1; +p2 << r.p2; +@@ + +msg="ERROR: nested lock+irqsave that reuses flags from %s." % (p1[0].line) +coccilib.report.print_report(p2[0], msg) diff --git a/scripts/coccinelle/locks/mini_lock.cocci b/scripts/coccinelle/locks/mini_lock.cocci new file mode 100644 index 00000000000..7641a292543 --- /dev/null +++ b/scripts/coccinelle/locks/mini_lock.cocci @@ -0,0 +1,95 @@ +/// Find missing unlocks. This semantic match considers the specific case +/// where the unlock is missing from an if branch, and there is a lock +/// before the if and an unlock after the if. False positives are due to +/// cases where the if branch represents a case where the function is +/// supposed to exit with the lock held, or where there is some preceding +/// function call that releases the lock. +/// +// Confidence: Moderate +// Copyright: (C) 2010 Nicolas Palix, DIKU. GPLv2. +// Copyright: (C) 2010 Julia Lawall, DIKU. GPLv2. +// Copyright: (C) 2010 Gilles Muller, INRIA/LiP6. GPLv2. +// URL: http://coccinelle.lip6.fr/ +// Comments: +// Options: -no_includes -include_headers + +virtual org +virtual report + +@prelocked@ +position p1,p; +expression E1; +@@ + +( +mutex_lock@p1 +| +mutex_trylock@p1 +| +spin_lock@p1 +| +spin_trylock@p1 +| +read_lock@p1 +| +read_trylock@p1 +| +write_lock@p1 +| +write_trylock@p1 +| +read_lock_irq@p1 +| +write_lock_irq@p1 +| +read_lock_irqsave@p1 +| +write_lock_irqsave@p1 +| +spin_lock_irq@p1 +| +spin_lock_irqsave@p1 +) (E1@p,...); + +@looped@ +position r; +@@ + +for(...;...;...) { <+... return@r ...; ...+> } + +@err@ +expression E1; +position prelocked.p; +position up != prelocked.p1; +position r!=looped.r; +identifier lock,unlock; +@@ + +lock(E1@p,...); +<+... when != E1 +if (...) { + ... when != E1 + return@r ...; +} +...+> +unlock@up(E1,...); + +@script:python depends on org@ +p << prelocked.p1; +lock << err.lock; +unlock << err.unlock; +p2 << err.r; +@@ + +cocci.print_main(lock,p) +cocci.print_secs(unlock,p2) + +@script:python depends on report@ +p << prelocked.p1; +lock << err.lock; +unlock << err.unlock; +p2 << err.r; +@@ + +msg = "preceding lock on line %s" % (p[0].line) +coccilib.report.print_report(p2[0],msg) diff --git a/scripts/coccinelle/misc/doubleinit.cocci b/scripts/coccinelle/misc/doubleinit.cocci new file mode 100644 index 00000000000..55d7dc19dfe --- /dev/null +++ b/scripts/coccinelle/misc/doubleinit.cocci @@ -0,0 +1,53 @@ +/// Find duplicate field initializations. This has a high rate of false +/// positives due to #ifdefs, which Coccinelle is not aware of in a structure +/// initialization. +/// +// Confidence: Low +// Copyright: (C) 2010 Nicolas Palix, DIKU. GPLv2. +// Copyright: (C) 2010 Julia Lawall, DIKU. GPLv2. +// Copyright: (C) 2010 Gilles Muller, INRIA/LiP6. GPLv2. +// URL: http://coccinelle.lip6.fr/ +// Comments: +// Options: -no_includes -include_headers + +virtual org +virtual report + +@r@ +identifier I, s, fld; +position p0,p; +expression E; +@@ + +struct I s =@p0 { ... .fld@p = E, ...}; + +@s@ +identifier I, s, r.fld; +position r.p0,p; +expression E; +@@ + +struct I s =@p0 { ... .fld@p = E, ...}; + +@script:python depends on org@ +p0 << r.p0; +fld << r.fld; +ps << s.p; +pr << r.p; +@@ + +if int(ps[0].line) < int(pr[0].line) or (int(ps[0].line) == int(pr[0].line) and int(ps[0].column) < int(pr[0].column)): + cocci.print_main(fld,p0) + cocci.print_secs("s",ps) + cocci.print_secs("r",pr) + +@script:python depends on report@ +p0 << r.p0; +fld << r.fld; +ps << s.p; +pr << r.p; +@@ + +if int(ps[0].line) < int(pr[0].line) or (int(ps[0].line) == int(pr[0].line) and int(ps[0].column) < int(pr[0].column)): + msg = "%s: first occurrence %s, second occurrence %s" % (fld,ps[0].line,pr[0].line) + coccilib.report.print_report(p0[0],msg) diff --git a/scripts/coccinelle/misc/ifcol.cocci b/scripts/coccinelle/misc/ifcol.cocci new file mode 100644 index 00000000000..b7ed91dbeb9 --- /dev/null +++ b/scripts/coccinelle/misc/ifcol.cocci @@ -0,0 +1,48 @@ +/// Find confusingly indented code in or after an if. An if branch should +/// be indented. The code following an if should not be indented. +/// Sometimes, code after an if that is indented is actually intended to be +/// part of the if branch. +/// +/// This has a high rate of false positives, because Coccinelle's column +/// calculation does not distinguish between spaces and tabs, so code that +/// is not visually aligned may be considered to be in the same column. +/// +// Confidence: Low +// Copyright: (C) 2010 Nicolas Palix, DIKU. GPLv2. +// Copyright: (C) 2010 Julia Lawall, DIKU. GPLv2. +// Copyright: (C) 2010 Gilles Muller, INRIA/LiP6. GPLv2. +// URL: http://coccinelle.lip6.fr/ +// Comments: +// Options: -no_includes -include_headers + +virtual org +virtual report + +@r disable braces4@ +position p1,p2; +statement S1,S2; +@@ + +( +if (...) { ... } +| +if (...) S1@p1 S2@p2 +) + +@script:python depends on org@ +p1 << r.p1; +p2 << r.p2; +@@ + +if (p1[0].column == p2[0].column): + cocci.print_main("branch",p1) + cocci.print_secs("after",p2) + +@script:python depends on report@ +p1 << r.p1; +p2 << r.p2; +@@ + +if (p1[0].column == p2[0].column): + msg = "code aligned with following code on line %s" % (p2[0].line) + coccilib.report.print_report(p1[0],msg) diff --git a/scripts/coccinelle/deref_null.cocci b/scripts/coccinelle/null/deref_null.cocci index 9969d76d0f4..9969d76d0f4 100644 --- a/scripts/coccinelle/deref_null.cocci +++ b/scripts/coccinelle/null/deref_null.cocci diff --git a/scripts/coccinelle/null/eno.cocci b/scripts/coccinelle/null/eno.cocci new file mode 100644 index 00000000000..4c9c52b9c41 --- /dev/null +++ b/scripts/coccinelle/null/eno.cocci @@ -0,0 +1,20 @@ +/// The various basic memory allocation functions don't return ERR_PTR +/// +// Confidence: High +// Copyright: (C) 2010 Nicolas Palix, DIKU. GPLv2. +// Copyright: (C) 2010 Julia Lawall, DIKU. GPLv2. +// Copyright: (C) 2010 Gilles Muller, INRIA/LiP6. GPLv2. +// URL: http://coccinelle.lip6.fr/ +// Comments: +// Options: -no_includes -include_headers + +virtual patch + +@@ +expression x,E; +@@ + +x = \(kmalloc\|kzalloc\|kcalloc\|kmem_cache_alloc\|kmem_cache_zalloc\|kmem_cache_alloc_node\|kmalloc_node\|kzalloc_node\)(...) +... when != x = E +- IS_ERR(x) ++ !x diff --git a/scripts/coccinelle/null/kmerr.cocci b/scripts/coccinelle/null/kmerr.cocci new file mode 100644 index 00000000000..949bf656c64 --- /dev/null +++ b/scripts/coccinelle/null/kmerr.cocci @@ -0,0 +1,72 @@ +/// This semantic patch looks for kmalloc etc that are not followed by a +/// NULL check. It only gives a report in the case where there is some +/// error handling code later in the function, which may be helpful +/// in determining what the error handling code for the call to kmalloc etc +/// should be. +/// +// Confidence: High +// Copyright: (C) 2010 Nicolas Palix, DIKU. GPLv2. +// Copyright: (C) 2010 Julia Lawall, DIKU. GPLv2. +// Copyright: (C) 2010 Gilles Muller, INRIA/LiP6. GPLv2. +// URL: http://coccinelle.lip6.fr/ +// Comments: +// Options: -no_includes -include_headers + +virtual context +virtual org +virtual report + +@withtest@ +expression x; +position p; +identifier f,fld; +@@ + +x@p = f(...); +... when != x->fld +\(x == NULL \| x != NULL\) + +@fixed depends on context && !org && !report@ +expression x,x1; +position p1 != withtest.p; +statement S; +position any withtest.p; +identifier f; +@@ + +*x@p1 = \(kmalloc\|kzalloc\|kcalloc\)(...); +... +*x1@p = f(...); +if (!x1) S + +// ------------------------------------------------------------------------ + +@rfixed depends on (org || report) && !context exists@ +expression x,x1; +position p1 != withtest.p; +position p2; +statement S; +position any withtest.p; +identifier f; +@@ + +x@p1 = \(kmalloc\|kzalloc\|kcalloc\)(...); +... +x1@p = f@p2(...); +if (!x1) S + +@script:python depends on org@ +p1 << rfixed.p1; +p2 << rfixed.p2; +@@ + +cocci.print_main("alloc call",p1) +cocci.print_secs("possible model",p2) + +@script:python depends on report@ +p1 << rfixed.p1; +p2 << rfixed.p2; +@@ + +msg = "alloc with no test, possible model on line %s" % (p2[0].line) +coccilib.report.print_report(p1[0],msg) diff --git a/scripts/coccinelle/tests/doublebitand.cocci b/scripts/coccinelle/tests/doublebitand.cocci new file mode 100644 index 00000000000..9ba73d05a77 --- /dev/null +++ b/scripts/coccinelle/tests/doublebitand.cocci @@ -0,0 +1,54 @@ +/// Find bit operations that include the same argument more than once +//# One source of false positives is when the argument performs a side +//# effect. Another source of false positives is when a neutral value +//# such as 0 for | is used to indicate no information, to maintain the +//# same structure as other similar expressions +/// +// Confidence: Moderate +// Copyright: (C) 2010 Nicolas Palix, DIKU. GPLv2. +// Copyright: (C) 2010 Julia Lawall, DIKU. GPLv2. +// Copyright: (C) 2010 Gilles Muller, INRIA/LiP6. GPLv2. +// URL: http://coccinelle.lip6.fr/ +// Comments: +// Options: -no_includes -include_headers + +virtual context +virtual org +virtual report + +@r expression@ +expression E; +position p; +@@ + +( +* E@p + & ... & E +| +* E@p + | ... | E +| +* E@p + & ... & !E +| +* E@p + | ... | !E +| +* !E@p + & ... & E +| +* !E@p + | ... | E +) + +@script:python depends on org@ +p << r.p; +@@ + +cocci.print_main("duplicated argument to & or |",p) + +@script:python depends on report@ +p << r.p; +@@ + +coccilib.report.print_report(p[0],"duplicated argument to & or |") diff --git a/scripts/coccinelle/tests/doubletest.cocci b/scripts/coccinelle/tests/doubletest.cocci new file mode 100644 index 00000000000..13a2c0e8a4b --- /dev/null +++ b/scripts/coccinelle/tests/doubletest.cocci @@ -0,0 +1,40 @@ +/// Find &&/|| operations that include the same argument more than once +//# A common source of false positives is when the argument performs a side +//# effect. +/// +// Confidence: Moderate +// Copyright: (C) 2010 Nicolas Palix, DIKU. GPLv2. +// Copyright: (C) 2010 Julia Lawall, DIKU. GPLv2. +// Copyright: (C) 2010 Gilles Muller, INRIA/LiP6. GPLv2. +// URL: http://coccinelle.lip6.fr/ +// Comments: +// Options: -no_includes -include_headers + +virtual context +virtual org +virtual report + +@r expression@ +expression E; +position p; +@@ + +( +* E@p + || ... || E +| +* E@p + && ... && E +) + +@script:python depends on org@ +p << r.p; +@@ + +cocci.print_main("duplicated argument to && or ||",p) + +@script:python depends on report@ +p << r.p; +@@ + +coccilib.report.print_report(p[0],"duplicated argument to && or ||") diff --git a/scripts/extract-ikconfig b/scripts/extract-ikconfig index 37f30d36c94..1512c0a755a 100755 --- a/scripts/extract-ikconfig +++ b/scripts/extract-ikconfig @@ -7,12 +7,10 @@ # The obscure use of the "tr" filter is to work around older versions of # "grep" that report the byte offset of the line instead of the pattern. # -# (c) 2009, Dick Streefland <dick@streefland.net> +# (c) 2009,2010 Dick Streefland <dick@streefland.net> # Licensed under the terms of the GNU General Public License. # ---------------------------------------------------------------------- -gz1='\037\213\010' -gz2='01' cf1='IKCFG_ST\037\213\010' cf2='0123456789' @@ -21,11 +19,25 @@ dump_config() if pos=`tr "$cf1\n$cf2" "\n$cf2=" < "$1" | grep -abo "^$cf2"` then pos=${pos%%:*} - tail -c+$(($pos+8)) "$1" | zcat -q - exit 0 + tail -c+$(($pos+8)) "$1" | zcat > $tmp1 2> /dev/null + if [ $? != 1 ] + then # exit status must be 0 or 2 (trailing garbage warning) + cat $tmp1 + exit 0 + fi fi } +try_decompress() +{ + for pos in `tr "$1\n$2" "\n$2=" < "$img" | grep -abo "^$2"` + do + pos=${pos%%:*} + tail -c+$pos "$img" | $3 > $tmp2 2> /dev/null + dump_config $tmp2 + done +} + # Check invocation: me=${0##*/} img=$1 @@ -35,18 +47,19 @@ then exit 2 fi +# Prepare temp files: +tmp1=/tmp/ikconfig$$.1 +tmp2=/tmp/ikconfig$$.2 +trap "rm -f $tmp1 $tmp2" 0 + # Initial attempt for uncompressed images or objects: dump_config "$img" -# That didn't work, so decompress and try again: -tmp=/tmp/ikconfig$$ -trap "rm -f $tmp" 0 -for pos in `tr "$gz1\n$gz2" "\n$gz2=" < "$img" | grep -abo "^$gz2"` -do - pos=${pos%%:*} - tail -c+$pos "$img" | zcat 2> /dev/null > $tmp - dump_config $tmp -done +# That didn't work, so retry after decompression. +try_decompress '\037\213\010' xy gunzip +try_decompress 'BZh' xy bunzip2 +try_decompress '\135\0\0\0' xxx unlzma +try_decompress '\211\114\132' xy 'lzop -d' # Bail out: echo "$me: Cannot find kernel config." >&2 diff --git a/scripts/namespace.pl b/scripts/namespace.pl index 361d0f71184..a71be6b7cde 100755 --- a/scripts/namespace.pl +++ b/scripts/namespace.pl @@ -84,6 +84,64 @@ my %ksymtab = (); # names that appear in __ksymtab_ my %ref = (); # $ref{$name} exists if there is a true external reference to $name my %export = (); # $export{$name} exists if there is an EXPORT_... of $name +my %nmexception = ( + 'fs/ext3/bitmap' => 1, + 'fs/ext4/bitmap' => 1, + 'arch/x86/lib/thunk_32' => 1, + 'arch/x86/lib/cmpxchg' => 1, + 'arch/x86/vdso/vdso32/note' => 1, + 'lib/irq_regs' => 1, + 'usr/initramfs_data' => 1, + 'drivers/scsi/aic94xx/aic94xx_dump' => 1, + 'drivers/scsi/libsas/sas_dump' => 1, + 'lib/dec_and_lock' => 1, + 'drivers/ide/ide-probe-mini' => 1, + 'usr/initramfs_data' => 1, + 'drivers/acpi/acpia/exdump' => 1, + 'drivers/acpi/acpia/rsdump' => 1, + 'drivers/acpi/acpia/nsdumpdv' => 1, + 'drivers/acpi/acpia/nsdump' => 1, + 'arch/ia64/sn/kernel/sn2/io' => 1, + 'arch/ia64/kernel/gate-data' => 1, + 'security/capability' => 1, + 'fs/ntfs/sysctl' => 1, + 'fs/jfs/jfs_debug' => 1, +); + +my %nameexception = ( + 'mod_use_count_' => 1, + '__initramfs_end' => 1, + '__initramfs_start' => 1, + '_einittext' => 1, + '_sinittext' => 1, + 'kallsyms_names' => 1, + 'kallsyms_num_syms' => 1, + 'kallsyms_addresses'=> 1, + '__this_module' => 1, + '_etext' => 1, + '_edata' => 1, + '_end' => 1, + '__bss_start' => 1, + '_text' => 1, + '_stext' => 1, + '__gp' => 1, + 'ia64_unw_start' => 1, + 'ia64_unw_end' => 1, + '__init_begin' => 1, + '__init_end' => 1, + '__bss_stop' => 1, + '__nosave_begin' => 1, + '__nosave_end' => 1, + 'pg0' => 1, + 'vdso_enabled' => 1, + '__stack_chk_fail' => 1, + 'VDSO32_PRELINK' => 1, + 'VDSO32_vsyscall' => 1, + 'VDSO32_rt_sigreturn'=>1, + 'VDSO32_sigreturn' => 1, +); + + &find(\&linux_objects, '.'); # find the objects and do_nm on them &list_multiply_defined(); &resolve_external_references(); @@ -105,7 +163,8 @@ sub linux_objects if (/.*\.o$/ && ! ( m:/built-in.o$: - || m:arch/x86/kernel/vsyscall-syms.o$: + || m:arch/x86/vdso/: + || m:arch/x86/boot/: || m:arch/ia64/ia32/ia32.o$: || m:arch/ia64/kernel/gate-syms.o$: || m:arch/ia64/lib/__divdi3.o$: @@ -148,6 +207,7 @@ sub linux_objects || m:^.*/\.tmp_: || m:^\.tmp_: || m:/vmlinux-obj.o$: + || m:^tools/: ) ) { do_nm($basename, $_); @@ -167,11 +227,11 @@ sub do_nm printf STDERR "$fullname is not an object file\n"; return; } - ($source = $fullname) =~ s/\.o$//; - if (-e "$objtree$source.c" || -e "$objtree$source.S") { - $source = "$objtree$source"; + ($source = $basename) =~ s/\.o$//; + if (-e "$source.c" || -e "$source.S") { + $source = "$objtree$File::Find::dir/$source"; } else { - $source = "$srctree$source"; + $source = "$srctree$File::Find::dir/$source"; } if (! -e "$source.c" && ! -e "$source.S") { # No obvious source, exclude the object if it is conglomerate @@ -214,6 +274,7 @@ sub do_nm # T global label/procedure # U external reference # W weak external reference to text that has been resolved + # V similar to W, but the value of the weak symbol becomes zero with no error. # a assembler equate # b static variable, uninitialised # d static variable, initialised @@ -222,8 +283,9 @@ sub do_nm # s static variable, uninitialised, small bss # t static label/procedures # w weak external reference to text that has not been resolved + # v similar to w # ? undefined type, used a lot by modules - if ($type !~ /^[ABCDGRSTUWabdgrstw?]$/) { + if ($type !~ /^[ABCDGRSTUWVabdgrstwv?]$/) { printf STDERR "nm output for $fullname contains unknown type '$_'\n"; } elsif ($name =~ /\./) { @@ -234,7 +296,7 @@ sub do_nm # binutils keeps changing the type for exported symbols, force it to R $type = 'R' if ($name =~ /^__ksymtab/ || $name =~ /^__kstrtab/); $name =~ s/_R[a-f0-9]{8}$//; # module versions adds this - if ($type =~ /[ABCDGRSTW]/ && + if ($type =~ /[ABCDGRSTWV]/ && $name ne 'init_module' && $name ne 'cleanup_module' && $name ne 'Using_Versions' && @@ -270,27 +332,9 @@ sub do_nm close($nmdata); if ($#nmdata < 0) { - if ( - $fullname ne "lib/brlock.o" - && $fullname ne "lib/dec_and_lock.o" - && $fullname ne "fs/xfs/xfs_macros.o" - && $fullname ne "drivers/ide/ide-probe-mini.o" - && $fullname ne "usr/initramfs_data.o" - && $fullname ne "drivers/acpi/executer/exdump.o" - && $fullname ne "drivers/acpi/resources/rsdump.o" - && $fullname ne "drivers/acpi/namespace/nsdumpdv.o" - && $fullname ne "drivers/acpi/namespace/nsdump.o" - && $fullname ne "arch/ia64/sn/kernel/sn2/io.o" - && $fullname ne "arch/ia64/kernel/gate-data.o" - && $fullname ne "drivers/ieee1394/oui.o" - && $fullname ne "security/capability.o" - && $fullname ne "sound/core/wrappers.o" - && $fullname ne "fs/ntfs/sysctl.o" - && $fullname ne "fs/jfs/jfs_debug.o" - ) { - printf "No nm data for $fullname\n"; - } - return; + printf "No nm data for $fullname\n" + unless $nmexception{$fullname}; + return; } $nmdata{$fullname} = \@nmdata; } @@ -319,18 +363,14 @@ sub list_multiply_defined foreach my $name (keys(%def)) { if ($#{$def{$name}} > 0) { # Special case for cond_syscall - if ($#{$def{$name}} == 1 && $name =~ /^sys_/ && - ($def{$name}[0] eq "kernel/sys.o" || - $def{$name}[1] eq "kernel/sys.o")) { - &drop_def("kernel/sys.o", $name); - next; - } - # Special case for i386 entry code - if ($#{$def{$name}} == 1 && $name =~ /^__kernel_/ && - $def{$name}[0] eq "arch/x86/kernel/vsyscall-int80_32.o" && - $def{$name}[1] eq "arch/x86/kernel/vsyscall-sysenter_32.o") { - &drop_def("arch/x86/kernel/vsyscall-sysenter_32.o", $name); - next; + if ($#{$def{$name}} == 1 && + ($name =~ /^sys_/ || $name =~ /^compat_sys_/ || + $name =~ /^sys32_/)) { + if($def{$name}[0] eq "kernel/sys_ni.o" || + $def{$name}[1] eq "kernel/sys_ni.o") { + &drop_def("kernel/sys_ni.o", $name); + next; + } } printf "$name is multiply defined in :-\n"; @@ -372,31 +412,7 @@ sub resolve_external_references $ref{$name} = "" } } - elsif ( $name ne "mod_use_count_" - && $name ne "__initramfs_end" - && $name ne "__initramfs_start" - && $name ne "_einittext" - && $name ne "_sinittext" - && $name ne "kallsyms_names" - && $name ne "kallsyms_num_syms" - && $name ne "kallsyms_addresses" - && $name ne "__this_module" - && $name ne "_etext" - && $name ne "_edata" - && $name ne "_end" - && $name ne "__bss_start" - && $name ne "_text" - && $name ne "_stext" - && $name ne "__gp" - && $name ne "ia64_unw_start" - && $name ne "ia64_unw_end" - && $name ne "__init_begin" - && $name ne "__init_end" - && $name ne "__bss_stop" - && $name ne "__nosave_begin" - && $name ne "__nosave_end" - && $name ne "pg0" - && $name ne "__module_text_address" + elsif ( ! $nameexception{$name} && $name !~ /^__sched_text_/ && $name !~ /^__start_/ && $name !~ /^__end_/ @@ -407,7 +423,6 @@ sub resolve_external_references && $name !~ /^__.*per_cpu_end/ && $name !~ /^__alt_instructions/ && $name !~ /^__setup_/ - && $name !~ /^jiffies/ && $name !~ /^__mod_timer/ && $name !~ /^__mod_page_state/ && $name !~ /^init_module/ |