Re: [PATCH] READ_ONCE, WRITE_ONCE, kcsan: Perform checks in __*_ONCE variants

From: Qian Cai
Date: Tue May 19 2020 - 23:16:58 EST


On Tue, May 19, 2020 at 10:47 PM Nathan Chancellor
<natechancellor@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:
>
> On Tue, May 19, 2020 at 10:28:41PM -0400, Qian Cai wrote:
> >
> >
> > > On May 19, 2020, at 6:05 PM, Thomas Gleixner <tglx@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
> > >
> > > Yes, it's unfortunate, but we have to stop making major concessions just
> > > because tools are not up to the task.
> > >
> > > We've done that way too much in the past and this particular problem
> > > clearly demonstrates that there are limits.
> > >
> > > Making brand new technology depend on sane tools is not asked too
> > > much. And yes, it's inconvenient, but all of us have to build tools
> > > every now and then to get our job done. It's not the end of the world.
> > >
> > > Building clang is trivial enough and pointing the make to the right
> > > compiler is not rocket science either.
> >
> > Yes, it all make sense from that angle. On the other hand, I want to be focus on kernel rather than compilers by using a stable and rocket-solid version. Not mentioned the time lost by compiling and properly manage my own toolchain in an automated environment, using such new version of compilers means that I have to inevitably deal with compiler bugs occasionally. Anyway, it is just some other more bugs I have to deal with, and I donât have a better solution to offer right now.
>
> Hi Qian,
>
> Shameless plug but I have made a Python script to efficiently configure
> then build clang specifically for building the kernel (turn off a lot of
> different things that the kernel does not need).
>
> https://github.com/ClangBuiltLinux/tc-build
>
> I added an option '--use-good-revision', which uses an older master
> version (basically somewhere between clang-10 and current master) that
> has been qualified against the kernel. I currently update it every
> Linux release but I am probably going to start doing it every month as
> I have written a pretty decent framework to ensure that nothing is
> breaking on either the LLVM or kernel side.
>
> $ ./build-llvm.py --use-good-revision
>
> should be all you need to get off the ground and running if you wanted
> to give it a shot. The script is completely self contained by default so
> it won't mess with the rest of your system. Additionally, leaving off
> '--use-good-revision' will just use the master branch, which can
> definitely be broken but not as often as you would think (although I
> totally understand wanting to focus on kernel regressions only).

Great, thanks. I'll try it in a bit.