[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index] Re: [XEN PATCH][for-next][for-4.19 v2 1/8] xen/include: add macro LOWEST_BIT
> On 20 Oct 2023, at 19:07, Stefano Stabellini <sstabellini@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > On Fri, 20 Oct 2023, Luca Fancellu wrote: >>> On 19 Oct 2023, at 20:58, Stefano Stabellini <sstabellini@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: >>> +Luca >>> >>>>>>>> --- a/xen/include/xen/macros.h >>>>>>>> +++ b/xen/include/xen/macros.h >>>>>>>> @@ -8,8 +8,10 @@ >>>>>>>> #define DIV_ROUND(n, d) (((n) + (d) / 2) / (d)) >>>>>>>> #define DIV_ROUND_UP(n, d) (((n) + (d) - 1) / (d)) >>>>>>>> >>>>>>>> -#define MASK_EXTR(v, m) (((v) & (m)) / ((m) & -(m))) >>>>>>>> -#define MASK_INSR(v, m) (((v) * ((m) & -(m))) & (m)) >>>>>>> >>>>>>> a SAF-<n>-safe comment here? >>>>>>> >>>>>> >>>>>> One reason is that now that violations only belonging to tool >>>>>> configurations >>>>>> and similar are documented in docs/misra/deviations.rst (committed in >>>>>> Stefano's >>>>>> branch for-4.19 [1]). >>>>> >>>>> But tool configuration means every analysis tool needs configuring >>>>> separately. That's why the comment tagging scheme was decided to be >>>>> preferred, iirc. >>>>> >>>>>> Also, there were disagreements on the SAF naming >>>>>> scheme, and >>>>>> patches like those would not be accepted at the moment. >>>>> >>>>> Well, that needs resolving. The naming there shouldn't lead to patches >>>>> being accepted that later may need redoing. >>>>> >>>>> Jan >>>> >>>> While this is true, in this case I'm not willing to deviate with a SAF, >>>> given >>>> that >>>> some ECLAIR-specific configuration would be needed anyways, given that I'm >>>> deviating a macro definition, rather than the line where it's actually used >>>> (and maybe other tools would need >>>> that as well). >>> >>> Did I get it right that the problem with using SAF in this case is that >>> it wouldn't be sufficient to add a SAF comment on top of the MACRO >>> definition, but we would need a SAF comment on top of every MACRO >>> invocation? >>> >>> If so, then not just for this MACRO but in general basically we have to >>> use deviations.rst. >>> >>> Luca, do you know what would be the behavior for cppcheck and/or >>> Coverity? I imagine it will be the same and they would also need a >>> deviation at every MACRO invocation, not just the definition? >> >> Seems that cppcheck reports at the macro definition, instead Coverity reports >> at the macro invocation. > > Does that mean that a /* SAF-xx-safe */ comment would work at the MACRO > definition for cppcheck but not for Coverity? > > If so, then I wonder if cppcheck's behavior is what we would like to > have, but from a code compliance point of view it is the least reliable, > so that's the reason why both Coverity and ECLAIR don't implement it. In > terms of correctness of the implementation we know cppcheck is lagging a > bit behind... Yes, I’m starting to think that if we want to deviate a large number of macro usage, We should come up with something like declaring the macro somewhere and adding the in-code comment automatically by the script before the analysis... But we need to see how feasible it is.
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