On Thu, 31 Mar 2022 11:16:53 PDT (-0700), Linus Torvalds wrote:
On Thu, Mar 31, 2022 at 3:51 AM Marc Kleine-Budde mkl@pengutronix.de wrote:
Cc += linux-sparse, Uwe, Luc Van Oostenryck
tl;dr:
A recent change in the kernel regarding the riscv -march handling breaks current sparse.
Sorry about that, looks like I'm not running sparse as part of my testing. I'll add it, but it might take a bit as I'm assuming there will be a bunch of issues it points out.
Gaah. Normally sparse doesn't even look at the -march flag, but for riscv it does, because it's meaningful for the predefined macros.
Maybe that 'die()' shouldn't be so fatal. And maybe add a few more extensions (but ignore them) to the parsing.
Something ENTIRELY UNTESTED like the attached.
Converting this to a warning seems reasonable to me, as then we're not as coupled to the sparse version. The current crop of extensions don't set anything exciting for Linux, but there are some on the horizon that likely will -- hopefully having sparse in my test setup should be sufficient to dig those up, though.
As far as the new extension go: "Counters" isn't an ISA extension, and "e" defines "__riscv_32e". It'd also be slightly saner to match on "_Zifencei", but that probably doesn't matter (GCC is sufficiently strict here). Looks like there's also some oddities in the sparse ISA string parsing, I'll go clean them up as I get it running locally.
We could also stop relying on the compiler's defines, which would avoid this problem entirely, but IIRC that was discussed when decided to modify sparse in the first place and we went this way (though I don't remember why). That would keep everything inside the kernel.