Re: [PATCH] kbuild: treat char as always signed

From: Linus Torvalds
Date: Wed Oct 19 2022 - 14:56:28 EST


On Wed, Oct 19, 2022 at 11:21 AM Nick Desaulniers
<ndesaulniers@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
>
> A few times in the past, we've split a warning flag into a group so
> that we could be more specific about distinct cases. Perhaps if
> -Wpointer-sign was a group that implied -Wpointer-char-sign, then the
> kernel could use -Wpointer-sign -Wno-pointer-char-sign.

That might be interesting, just to see how much of the kernel is about
'char *' and how much is other noise.

Just for fun (for some definition of "fun") I tried to remove the
-Wno-pointer-sign thing, and started building a kernel.

After fixing fortify-string.h to not complain (which was indeed about
strlen() signedness), it turns out a lot were still about 'char', but
not necessarily the <string,h> functions.

We use 'unsigned char *' for our dentry data, for example, and then you get

warning: pointer targets in initialization of ‘const unsigned
char *’ from ‘char *’ differ in signedness

when you do something like

QSTR_INIT(NULL_FILE_NAME,

which is simply doing a regular initializer assignment, and wants to
assign a constant string (in this case the constant string "null") to
that "const unsigned char *name".

That's certainly another example of "why the heck did the compiler
warn about that thing".

You can literally try to compile this one-liner with gcc:

const unsigned char *c = "p";

and it will complain. What a hugely pointless warning.

BUT.

It turns out we have a lot of non-char warnings too.

The kernel does all these "generic functions" that are based on size, like

atomic_try_cmpxchg_acquire()

which are basically defined to be about "int sized object", but with
unspecified sign.

And the sign is basically pointless. Some people want "unsigned int",
others might want a signed int.

So from a quick grep, we do have a lot of strlen/strcpy cases, but we
also do have a lot of other cases.

Hundreds and hundreds of that atomic_try_cmpxchg_acquire(), for
example. And they might be trivial to fix (it might be similar to the
fortify-string.h one where it's just a header file that generates most
of them in one single place), but with all the ones that are just
clearly the compiler being silly, they aren't really even worth
looking at.

Linus