Re: [XEN PATCH] automation/eclair: reorganize pipelines
> On 25 Apr 2024, at 14:32, Nicola Vetrini wrote: > > On 2024-04-25 11:40, Federico Serafini wrote: >> On 25/04/24 02:06, Stefano Stabellini wrote: >>> On Tue, 23 Apr 2024, Federico Serafini wrote: From: Simone Ballarin Introduce accepted_guidelines.sh: a script to autogenerate the configuration file accepted.ecl from docs/misra/rules.rst which enables all accepted guidelines. Introduce monitored.ecl: a manual selection of accepted guidelines which are clean or almost clean, it is intended to be used for the analyses triggered by commits. Reorganize tagging.ecl: -Remove "accepted" tags: keeping track of accepted guidelines tagging them as "accepted" in the configuration file tagging.ecl is no longer needed since docs/rules.rst is keeping track of them. -Tag more guidelines as clean. Reorganize eclair pipelines: - Set1, Set2, Set3 are now obsolete: remove the corresponding pipelines and ecl files. - Amend scheduled eclair pipeline to use accepted.ecl. - Amend triggered eclair pipeline to use monitored.ecl. Rename and improve action_check_clean_regressions.sh to print a diagnostic in case a commit introduces a violation of a clean guideline. An example of diagnostic is the following: Failure: 13 regressions found for clean guidelines service MC3R1.R8.2: (required) Function types shall be in prototype form with named parameters: violation: 13 Signed-off-by: Simone Ballarin Signed-off-by: Federico Serafini Signed-off-by: Alessandro Zucchelli >>> Fantastic work, thank you! >>> Reviewed-by: Stefano Stabellini >>> Is this patch safe to commit now? Or would it cause gitlab-ci breakage? >> Yes, it is safe because the ECLAIR analysis is still allowed to fail. >> Committing this patch wouldn't break the CI but it will highlight some >> regressions with the orange badge and the following messages: >> arm: >> Failure: 5 regressions found for clean guidelines >> service MC3R1.R1.1: (required) The program shall contain no violations of >> the standard C syntax and constraints, and shall not exceed the >> implementation's translation limits: >> violation: 5 > Hi Nicola, > +Cc ARM maintainers, Luca Fancellu > > after some investigation on these regressions on R1.1, there are some > concerns with the current code: > 2209c1e35b479dff8ed3d3161001ffdefa0a704e introduced the struct > > struct membanks { >unsigned int nr_banks; >unsigned int max_banks; >struct membank bank[]; > }; > > with a flexible array member at the end; this is well-defined in C99, but > what is non-standard (a GNU extension) is having this struct as a member to > another struct/union in a position other than the last. > > This is still supported by GNU (albeit reliance on this is undocumented for > Xen), but what is concerning here is the following (taken from [1]): > > "A structure containing a C99 flexible array member, or a union containing > such a structure, is not the last field of another structure, for example: > > struct flex { int length; char data[]; }; > > struct mid_flex { int m; struct flex flex_data; int n; }; > > In the above, accessing a member of the array mid_flex.flex_data.data[] might > have undefined behavior. Compilers do not handle such a case consistently. > Any code relying on this case should be modified to ensure that flexible > array members only end up at the ends of structures. > Please use the warning option -Wflex-array-member-not-at-end to identify all > such cases in the source code and modify them. This extension is now > deprecated." > > It looks like this option, and the corresponding deprecation of the > extension, will be available starting from GCC 14, so this might impact > future compiler updates for Xen builds. > > Linux is also concerned about this (see [2]), so I think the changes in > struct layout introduced by the series [3] should be reviewed to determine > whether this change was deliberate or happened as a byproduct. If this is > determined not to be a legitimate concern, then this can be documented as an > use of the GNU extension. Thanks for letting us know, so the change was deliberate, the effect probably not, I guess we need to find a way to fix this in order to use this interface. Cheers, Luca
Re: [XEN PATCH] automation/eclair: reorganize pipelines
On Thu, 25 Apr 2024, Federico Serafini wrote: > On 25/04/24 02:06, Stefano Stabellini wrote: > > On Tue, 23 Apr 2024, Federico Serafini wrote: > > > From: Simone Ballarin > > > > > > Introduce accepted_guidelines.sh: a script to autogenerate the > > > configuration file accepted.ecl from docs/misra/rules.rst which enables > > > all accepted guidelines. > > > > > > Introduce monitored.ecl: a manual selection of accepted guidelines > > > which are clean or almost clean, it is intended to be used for the > > > analyses triggered by commits. > > > > > > Reorganize tagging.ecl: > > >-Remove "accepted" tags: keeping track of accepted guidelines tagging > > > them as "accepted" in the configuration file tagging.ecl is no > > > longer needed since docs/rules.rst is keeping track of them. > > >-Tag more guidelines as clean. > > > > > > Reorganize eclair pipelines: > > >- Set1, Set2, Set3 are now obsolete: remove the corresponding > > > pipelines and ecl files. > > >- Amend scheduled eclair pipeline to use accepted.ecl. > > >- Amend triggered eclair pipeline to use monitored.ecl. > > > > > > Rename and improve action_check_clean_regressions.sh to print a > > > diagnostic in case a commit introduces a violation of a clean guideline. > > > > > > An example of diagnostic is the following: > > > > > > Failure: 13 regressions found for clean guidelines > > >service MC3R1.R8.2: (required) Function types shall be in prototype > > > form with named parameters: > > > violation: 13 > > > > > > Signed-off-by: Simone Ballarin > > > Signed-off-by: Federico Serafini > > > Signed-off-by: Alessandro Zucchelli > > > > Fantastic work, thank you! > > > > Reviewed-by: Stefano Stabellini > > > > Is this patch safe to commit now? Or would it cause gitlab-ci breakage? > > Yes, it is safe because the ECLAIR analysis is still allowed to fail. > Committing this patch wouldn't break the CI but it will highlight some > regressions with the orange badge and the following messages: OK thanks, I'll commit it > arm: > > Failure: 5 regressions found for clean guidelines > service MC3R1.R1.1: (required) The program shall contain no violations of > the standard C syntax and constraints, and shall not exceed the > implementation's translation limits: >violation: 5 > > x86: > > Failure: 2 regressions found for clean guidelines > service MC3R1.R8.2: (required) Function types shall be in prototype form > with named parameters: >violation: 2 > > (George just sent a patch to address the regressions of Rule 8.2.) As soon as we solve these two issues, I think we should remove the allow_failure: true from the two ECLAIR jobs scanning clean guidelines. More on this below. > > > > One question below. > > > > > > > - > > > > > > # Clean guidelines # > > > > > > -doc_begin="Clean guidelines: new violations for these guidelines are > > > not accepted." > > > > > > --service_selector={clean_guidelines_common,"MC3R1.D1.1||MC3R1.D2.1||MC3R1.D4.11||MC3R1.D4.14||MC3R1.R1.1||MC3R1.R1.3||MC3R1.R1.4||MC3R1.R2.2||MC3R1.R3.1||MC3R1.R3.2||MC3R1.R4.1||MC3R1.R4.2||MC3R1.R5.1||MC3R1.R5.2||MC3R1.R5.4||MC3R1.R5.6||MC3R1.R6.1||MC3R1.R6.2||MC3R1.R7.1||MC3R1.R8.1||MC3R1.R8.2||MC3R1.R8.5||MC3R1.R8.6||MC3R1.R8.8||MC3R1.R8.10||MC3R1.R8.12||MC3R1.R8.14||MC3R1.R9.2||MC3R1.R9.4||MC3R1.R9.5||MC3R1.R12.5||MC3R1.R17.3||MC3R1.R17.4||MC3R1.R17.6||MC3R1.R20.13||MC3R1.R20.14||MC3R1.R21.13||MC3R1.R21.19||MC3R1.R21.21||MC3R1.R22.2||MC3R1.R22.4||MC3R1.R22.5||MC3R1.R22.6" > > > +-service_selector={clean_guidelines_common,"MC3R1.D1.1||MC3R1.D2.1||MC3R1.D4.1||MC3R1.D4.11||MC3R1.D4.14||MC3R1.R1.1||MC3R1.R11.7||MC3R1.R11.9||MC3R1.R12.5||MC3R1.R1.3||MC3R1.R1.4||MC3R1.R14.1||MC3R1.R16.7||MC3R1.R17.1||MC3R1.R17.3||MC3R1.R17.4||MC3R1.R17.5||MC3R1.R17.6||MC3R1.R20.13||MC3R1.R20.14||MC3R1.R20.4||MC3R1.R20.9||MC3R1.R21.13||MC3R1.R21.19||MC3R1.R21.21||MC3R1.R2.2||MC3R1.R22.2||MC3R1.R22.4||MC3R1.R22.5||MC3R1.R22.6||MC3R1.R2.6||MC3R1.R3.1||MC3R1.R3.2||MC3R1.R4.1||MC3R1.R4.2||MC3R1.R5.1||MC3R1.R5.2||MC3R1.R5.4||MC3R1.R5.6||MC3R1.R6.1||MC3R1.R6.2||MC3R1.R7.1||MC3R1.R7.4||MC3R1.R8.1||MC3R1.R8.10||MC3R1.R8.12||MC3R1.R8.14||MC3R1.R8.2||MC3R1.R8.5||MC3R1.R8.6||MC3R1.R8.8||MC3R1.R9.2||MC3R1.R9.3||MC3R1.R9.4||MC3R1.R9.5" > > > } > > > > Is this list different from monitored.ecl? If so, why? If not, maybe we > > don't need to repeat the list here as well? > > Quick answer: this list is different from monitored.ecl and the two > lists must coexist. > > Here, we are "tagging" some guidelines as "clean": > this list is crucial and will be (manually) updated every time a new > guideline reaches 0 violations, it shall not be removed because this tag > allows ECLAIR to print a diagnostic and fail in case unjustified > violations are found for the tagged guidelines. > > The monitored.ecl is the list of guidelines which are analyzed at each > commit: the list shall include all the
Re: [XEN PATCH] automation/eclair: reorganize pipelines
On 2024-04-25 11:40, Federico Serafini wrote: On 25/04/24 02:06, Stefano Stabellini wrote: On Tue, 23 Apr 2024, Federico Serafini wrote: From: Simone Ballarin Introduce accepted_guidelines.sh: a script to autogenerate the configuration file accepted.ecl from docs/misra/rules.rst which enables all accepted guidelines. Introduce monitored.ecl: a manual selection of accepted guidelines which are clean or almost clean, it is intended to be used for the analyses triggered by commits. Reorganize tagging.ecl: -Remove "accepted" tags: keeping track of accepted guidelines tagging them as "accepted" in the configuration file tagging.ecl is no longer needed since docs/rules.rst is keeping track of them. -Tag more guidelines as clean. Reorganize eclair pipelines: - Set1, Set2, Set3 are now obsolete: remove the corresponding pipelines and ecl files. - Amend scheduled eclair pipeline to use accepted.ecl. - Amend triggered eclair pipeline to use monitored.ecl. Rename and improve action_check_clean_regressions.sh to print a diagnostic in case a commit introduces a violation of a clean guideline. An example of diagnostic is the following: Failure: 13 regressions found for clean guidelines service MC3R1.R8.2: (required) Function types shall be in prototype form with named parameters: violation: 13 Signed-off-by: Simone Ballarin Signed-off-by: Federico Serafini Signed-off-by: Alessandro Zucchelli Fantastic work, thank you! Reviewed-by: Stefano Stabellini Is this patch safe to commit now? Or would it cause gitlab-ci breakage? Yes, it is safe because the ECLAIR analysis is still allowed to fail. Committing this patch wouldn't break the CI but it will highlight some regressions with the orange badge and the following messages: arm: Failure: 5 regressions found for clean guidelines service MC3R1.R1.1: (required) The program shall contain no violations of the standard C syntax and constraints, and shall not exceed the implementation's translation limits: violation: 5 +Cc ARM maintainers, Luca Fancellu after some investigation on these regressions on R1.1, there are some concerns with the current code: 2209c1e35b479dff8ed3d3161001ffdefa0a704e introduced the struct struct membanks { unsigned int nr_banks; unsigned int max_banks; struct membank bank[]; }; with a flexible array member at the end; this is well-defined in C99, but what is non-standard (a GNU extension) is having this struct as a member to another struct/union in a position other than the last. This is still supported by GNU (albeit reliance on this is undocumented for Xen), but what is concerning here is the following (taken from [1]): "A structure containing a C99 flexible array member, or a union containing such a structure, is not the last field of another structure, for example: struct flex { int length; char data[]; }; struct mid_flex { int m; struct flex flex_data; int n; }; In the above, accessing a member of the array mid_flex.flex_data.data[] might have undefined behavior. Compilers do not handle such a case consistently. Any code relying on this case should be modified to ensure that flexible array members only end up at the ends of structures. Please use the warning option -Wflex-array-member-not-at-end to identify all such cases in the source code and modify them. This extension is now deprecated." It looks like this option, and the corresponding deprecation of the extension, will be available starting from GCC 14, so this might impact future compiler updates for Xen builds. Linux is also concerned about this (see [2]), so I think the changes in struct layout introduced by the series [3] should be reviewed to determine whether this change was deliberate or happened as a byproduct. If this is determined not to be a legitimate concern, then this can be documented as an use of the GNU extension. See [4] for the findings. [1] https://gcc.gnu.org/onlinedocs/gcc/Zero-Length.html [2] https://lkml.org/lkml/2024/4/11/1293 [3] https://lore.kernel.org/xen-devel/20240418073652.3622828-1-luca.fance...@arm.com/ [4] https://saas.eclairit.com:3787/fs/var/local/eclair/xen-project.ecdf/xen-project/xen/ECLAIR_normal/staging/ARM64/6713015426/PROJECT.ecd;/by_service/MC3R1.R1.1.html Thanks, Nicola x86: Failure: 2 regressions found for clean guidelines service MC3R1.R8.2: (required) Function types shall be in prototype form with named parameters: violation: 2 (George just sent a patch to address the regressions of Rule 8.2.) -- Nicola Vetrini, BSc Software Engineer, BUGSENG srl (https://bugseng.com)
Re: [XEN PATCH] automation/eclair: reorganize pipelines
On 25/04/24 02:06, Stefano Stabellini wrote: On Tue, 23 Apr 2024, Federico Serafini wrote: From: Simone Ballarin Introduce accepted_guidelines.sh: a script to autogenerate the configuration file accepted.ecl from docs/misra/rules.rst which enables all accepted guidelines. Introduce monitored.ecl: a manual selection of accepted guidelines which are clean or almost clean, it is intended to be used for the analyses triggered by commits. Reorganize tagging.ecl: -Remove "accepted" tags: keeping track of accepted guidelines tagging them as "accepted" in the configuration file tagging.ecl is no longer needed since docs/rules.rst is keeping track of them. -Tag more guidelines as clean. Reorganize eclair pipelines: - Set1, Set2, Set3 are now obsolete: remove the corresponding pipelines and ecl files. - Amend scheduled eclair pipeline to use accepted.ecl. - Amend triggered eclair pipeline to use monitored.ecl. Rename and improve action_check_clean_regressions.sh to print a diagnostic in case a commit introduces a violation of a clean guideline. An example of diagnostic is the following: Failure: 13 regressions found for clean guidelines service MC3R1.R8.2: (required) Function types shall be in prototype form with named parameters: violation: 13 Signed-off-by: Simone Ballarin Signed-off-by: Federico Serafini Signed-off-by: Alessandro Zucchelli Fantastic work, thank you! Reviewed-by: Stefano Stabellini Is this patch safe to commit now? Or would it cause gitlab-ci breakage? Yes, it is safe because the ECLAIR analysis is still allowed to fail. Committing this patch wouldn't break the CI but it will highlight some regressions with the orange badge and the following messages: arm: Failure: 5 regressions found for clean guidelines service MC3R1.R1.1: (required) The program shall contain no violations of the standard C syntax and constraints, and shall not exceed the implementation's translation limits: violation: 5 x86: Failure: 2 regressions found for clean guidelines service MC3R1.R8.2: (required) Function types shall be in prototype form with named parameters: violation: 2 (George just sent a patch to address the regressions of Rule 8.2.) One question below. - # Clean guidelines # -doc_begin="Clean guidelines: new violations for these guidelines are not accepted." --service_selector={clean_guidelines_common,"MC3R1.D1.1||MC3R1.D2.1||MC3R1.D4.11||MC3R1.D4.14||MC3R1.R1.1||MC3R1.R1.3||MC3R1.R1.4||MC3R1.R2.2||MC3R1.R3.1||MC3R1.R3.2||MC3R1.R4.1||MC3R1.R4.2||MC3R1.R5.1||MC3R1.R5.2||MC3R1.R5.4||MC3R1.R5.6||MC3R1.R6.1||MC3R1.R6.2||MC3R1.R7.1||MC3R1.R8.1||MC3R1.R8.2||MC3R1.R8.5||MC3R1.R8.6||MC3R1.R8.8||MC3R1.R8.10||MC3R1.R8.12||MC3R1.R8.14||MC3R1.R9.2||MC3R1.R9.4||MC3R1.R9.5||MC3R1.R12.5||MC3R1.R17.3||MC3R1.R17.4||MC3R1.R17.6||MC3R1.R20.13||MC3R1.R20.14||MC3R1.R21.13||MC3R1.R21.19||MC3R1.R21.21||MC3R1.R22.2||MC3R1.R22.4||MC3R1.R22.5||MC3R1.R22.6" +-service_selector={clean_guidelines_common,"MC3R1.D1.1||MC3R1.D2.1||MC3R1.D4.1||MC3R1.D4.11||MC3R1.D4.14||MC3R1.R1.1||MC3R1.R11.7||MC3R1.R11.9||MC3R1.R12.5||MC3R1.R1.3||MC3R1.R1.4||MC3R1.R14.1||MC3R1.R16.7||MC3R1.R17.1||MC3R1.R17.3||MC3R1.R17.4||MC3R1.R17.5||MC3R1.R17.6||MC3R1.R20.13||MC3R1.R20.14||MC3R1.R20.4||MC3R1.R20.9||MC3R1.R21.13||MC3R1.R21.19||MC3R1.R21.21||MC3R1.R2.2||MC3R1.R22.2||MC3R1.R22.4||MC3R1.R22.5||MC3R1.R22.6||MC3R1.R2.6||MC3R1.R3.1||MC3R1.R3.2||MC3R1.R4.1||MC3R1.R4.2||MC3R1.R5.1||MC3R1.R5.2||MC3R1.R5.4||MC3R1.R5.6||MC3R1.R6.1||MC3R1.R6.2||MC3R1.R7.1||MC3R1.R7.4||MC3R1.R8.1||MC3R1.R8.10||MC3R1.R8.12||MC3R1.R8.14||MC3R1.R8.2||MC3R1.R8.5||MC3R1.R8.6||MC3R1.R8.8||MC3R1.R9.2||MC3R1.R9.3||MC3R1.R9.4||MC3R1.R9.5" } Is this list different from monitored.ecl? If so, why? If not, maybe we don't need to repeat the list here as well? Quick answer: this list is different from monitored.ecl and the two lists must coexist. Here, we are "tagging" some guidelines as "clean": this list is crucial and will be (manually) updated every time a new guideline reaches 0 violations, it shall not be removed because this tag allows ECLAIR to print a diagnostic and fail in case unjustified violations are found for the tagged guidelines. The monitored.ecl is the list of guidelines which are analyzed at each commit: the list shall include all the guidelines tagged as "clean" (to do the proper regressions checks) but the monitored list can also include some accepted guidelines for which it may be interesting to see the number of violations at each commit, for example, we put there some almost-clean guidelines (guidelines with few violations left but not yet tagged as clean yet). Introducing new violations of monitored but not-clean guidelines will not cause a failure. -- Federico Serafini, M.Sc. Software Engineer, BUGSENG (http://bugseng.com)
Re: [XEN PATCH] automation/eclair: reorganize pipelines
On Tue, 23 Apr 2024, Federico Serafini wrote: > From: Simone Ballarin > > Introduce accepted_guidelines.sh: a script to autogenerate the > configuration file accepted.ecl from docs/misra/rules.rst which enables > all accepted guidelines. > > Introduce monitored.ecl: a manual selection of accepted guidelines > which are clean or almost clean, it is intended to be used for the > analyses triggered by commits. > > Reorganize tagging.ecl: > -Remove "accepted" tags: keeping track of accepted guidelines tagging >them as "accepted" in the configuration file tagging.ecl is no >longer needed since docs/rules.rst is keeping track of them. > -Tag more guidelines as clean. > > Reorganize eclair pipelines: > - Set1, Set2, Set3 are now obsolete: remove the corresponding > pipelines and ecl files. > - Amend scheduled eclair pipeline to use accepted.ecl. > - Amend triggered eclair pipeline to use monitored.ecl. > > Rename and improve action_check_clean_regressions.sh to print a > diagnostic in case a commit introduces a violation of a clean guideline. > > An example of diagnostic is the following: > > Failure: 13 regressions found for clean guidelines > service MC3R1.R8.2: (required) Function types shall be in prototype form > with named parameters: >violation: 13 > > Signed-off-by: Simone Ballarin > Signed-off-by: Federico Serafini > Signed-off-by: Alessandro Zucchelli Fantastic work, thank you! Reviewed-by: Stefano Stabellini Is this patch safe to commit now? Or would it cause gitlab-ci breakage? One question below. > --- > automation/eclair_analysis/ECLAIR/Set2.ecl| 25 --- > automation/eclair_analysis/ECLAIR/Set3.ecl| 67 --- > .../ECLAIR/accepted_guidelines.sh | 13 > .../eclair_analysis/ECLAIR/action.helpers | 3 +- > .../eclair_analysis/ECLAIR/action.settings| 1 + > .../ECLAIR/action_check_clean_regressions.sh | 38 +++ > .../ECLAIR/action_clean_added.sh | 36 -- > automation/eclair_analysis/ECLAIR/analyze.sh | 2 +- > .../eclair_analysis/ECLAIR/generate_ecl.sh| 4 ++ > .../ECLAIR/{Set1.ecl => monitored.ecl}| 57 +++- > automation/eclair_analysis/ECLAIR/tagging.ecl | 15 + > automation/gitlab-ci/analyze.yaml | 48 ++--- > automation/scripts/eclair | 8 +-- > 13 files changed, 108 insertions(+), 209 deletions(-) > delete mode 100644 automation/eclair_analysis/ECLAIR/Set2.ecl > delete mode 100644 automation/eclair_analysis/ECLAIR/Set3.ecl > create mode 100755 automation/eclair_analysis/ECLAIR/accepted_guidelines.sh > create mode 100755 > automation/eclair_analysis/ECLAIR/action_check_clean_regressions.sh > delete mode 100755 automation/eclair_analysis/ECLAIR/action_clean_added.sh > rename automation/eclair_analysis/ECLAIR/{Set1.ecl => monitored.ecl} (67%) > > diff --git a/automation/eclair_analysis/ECLAIR/Set2.ecl > b/automation/eclair_analysis/ECLAIR/Set2.ecl > deleted file mode 100644 > index 7608335cf4..00 > --- a/automation/eclair_analysis/ECLAIR/Set2.ecl > +++ /dev/null > @@ -1,25 +0,0 @@ > --doc_begin="Set 2 of Xen MISRA C guidelines" > --enable=MC3R1.R10.1 > --enable=MC3R1.R10.2 > --enable=MC3R1.R10.3 > --enable=MC3R1.R10.4 > --enable=MC3R1.R10.6 > --enable=MC3R1.R10.7 > --enable=MC3R1.R10.8 > --enable=MC3R1.R11.1 > --enable=MC3R1.R11.2 > --enable=MC3R1.R11.3 > --enable=MC3R1.R11.6 > --enable=MC3R1.R11.7 > --enable=MC3R1.R11.8 > --enable=MC3R1.R11.9 > --enable=MC3R1.R12.2 > --enable=MC3R1.R13.1 > --enable=MC3R1.R13.2 > --enable=MC3R1.R13.5 > --enable=MC3R1.R13.6 > --enable=MC3R1.R14.1 > --enable=MC3R1.R14.2 > --enable=MC3R1.R14.3 > --enable=MC3R1.R14.4 > --doc_end > diff --git a/automation/eclair_analysis/ECLAIR/Set3.ecl > b/automation/eclair_analysis/ECLAIR/Set3.ecl > deleted file mode 100644 > index d2c2c4b21f..00 > --- a/automation/eclair_analysis/ECLAIR/Set3.ecl > +++ /dev/null > @@ -1,67 +0,0 @@ > --doc_begin="Set 3 of Xen MISRA C guidelines" > --enable=MC3R1.D4.12 > --enable=MC3R1.R5.5 > --enable=MC3R1.R5.7 > --enable=MC3R1.R5.8 > --enable=MC3R1.R15.2 > --enable=MC3R1.R15.3 > --enable=MC3R1.R15.6 > --enable=MC3R1.R15.7 > --enable=MC3R1.R16.1 > --enable=MC3R1.R16.2 > --enable=MC3R1.R16.3 > --enable=MC3R1.R16.4 > --enable=MC3R1.R16.5 > --enable=MC3R1.R16.6 > --enable=MC3R1.R16.7 > --enable=MC3R1.R17.1 > --enable=MC3R1.R17.2 > --enable=MC3R1.R17.5 > --enable=MC3R1.R17.7 > --enable=MC3R1.R18.1 > --enable=MC3R1.R18.2 > --enable=MC3R1.R18.3 > --enable=MC3R1.R18.6 > --enable=MC3R1.R18.7 > --enable=MC3R1.R18.8 > --enable=MC3R1.R20.2 > --enable=MC3R1.R20.3 > --enable=MC3R1.R20.4 > --enable=MC3R1.R20.6 > --enable=MC3R1.R20.7 > --enable=MC3R1.R20.8 > --enable=MC3R1.R20.9 > --enable=MC3R1.R20.11 > --enable=MC3R1.R20.12 > --enable=MC3R1.R20.13 > --enable=MC3R1.R20.14 > --enable=MC3R1.R21.1 > --enable=MC3R1.R21.2 > --enable=MC3R1.R21.3 > --enable=MC3R1.R21.4 > --enable=MC3R1.R21.5 >