[Intel-wired-lan] [PATCH 2/6] treewide: remove using list iterator after loop body as a ptr
Greg KH
greg at kroah.com
Tue Mar 1 17:58:02 UTC 2022
On Tue, Mar 01, 2022 at 06:40:04PM +0100, Jakob Koschel wrote:
>
>
> > On 1. Mar 2022, at 18:36, Greg KH <greg at kroah.com> wrote:
> >
> > On Tue, Mar 01, 2022 at 12:28:15PM +0100, Jakob Koschel wrote:
> >>
> >>
> >>> On 1. Mar 2022, at 01:41, Linus Torvalds <torvalds at linux-foundation.org> wrote:
> >>>
> >>> On Mon, Feb 28, 2022 at 1:47 PM Jakob Koschel <jakobkoschel at gmail.com> wrote:
> >>>>
> >>>> The goal of this is to get compiler warnings right? This would indeed be great.
> >>>
> >>> Yes, so I don't mind having a one-time patch that has been gathered
> >>> using some automated checker tool, but I don't think that works from a
> >>> long-term maintenance perspective.
> >>>
> >>> So if we have the basic rule being "don't use the loop iterator after
> >>> the loop has finished, because it can cause all kinds of subtle
> >>> issues", then in _addition_ to fixing the existing code paths that
> >>> have this issue, I really would want to (a) get a compiler warning for
> >>> future cases and (b) make it not actually _work_ for future cases.
> >>>
> >>> Because otherwise it will just happen again.
> >>>
> >>>> Changing the list_for_each_entry() macro first will break all of those cases
> >>>> (e.g. the ones using 'list_entry_is_head()).
> >>>
> >>> So I have no problems with breaking cases that we basically already
> >>> have a patch for due to your automated tool. There were certainly
> >>> more than a handful, but it didn't look _too_ bad to just make the
> >>> rule be "don't use the iterator after the loop".
> >>>
> >>> Of course, that's just based on that patch of yours. Maybe there are a
> >>> ton of other cases that your patch didn't change, because they didn't
> >>> match your trigger case, so I may just be overly optimistic here.
> >>
> >> Based on the coccinelle script there are ~480 cases that need fixing
> >> in total. I'll now finish all of them and then split them by
> >> submodules as Greg suggested and repost a patch set per submodule.
> >> Sounds good?
> >
> > Sounds good to me!
> >
> > If you need help carving these up and maintaining them over time as
> > different subsystem maintainers accept/ignore them, just let me know.
> > Doing large patchsets like this can be tough without a lot of
> > experience.
>
> Very much appreciated!
>
> There will probably be some cases that do not match one of the pattern
> we already discussed and need separate attention.
>
> I was planning to start with one subsystem and adjust the coming ones
> according to the feedback gather there instead of posting all of them
> in one go.
That seems wise. Feel free to use USB as a testing ground for this if
you want to :)
thanks,
greg k-h
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