This patch stops "modpost" from issuing erroneous modpost warnings on ARM builds, which it's been doing simce since maybe last summer. A canonical example would be driver method table entries:
WARNING: <path> - Section mismatch: reference to .exit.text:<name>_remove from .data after '$d' (at offset 0x4) That "$d" symbol is generated by tools conformant with ARM ABI specs; in this case, it's a relocation in the start of a "<name>_driver" struct. The erroneous warnings appear to be issued because "modpost" whitelists references from "<name>_driver" data into init and exit sections ... but does NOT whitelist them from "$d" (and can't). This patch prevents the modpost symbol lookup code from ever returning those symbols, so it will return a whitelisted symbol instead. Now to revert various code-bloating "fixes" that got merged because of this modpost bug.... Signed-off-by: David Brownell <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> --- Likely this patch can be improved on, but there's another issue. It seems to me that these modpost checks are wrong: * Lingering pointers that point into sections modprobe removes are *always* unsafe ... including probe() methods marked "__init" on hotpluggable busses. Trivial fix: use __devinit instead; or maybe platform_driver_probe(). * Lingering pointers that point into sections that aren't removed are *never* unsafe ... including this remove() method case, since module unloading is configured and the __exit stuff must stay. Whitelisting the former means not reporting potential oopsing cases; dangerous. Whereas even *checking* the latter is a waste of effort. Index: at91/scripts/mod/modpost.c =================================================================== --- at91.orig/scripts/mod/modpost.c 2007-01-11 22:51:49.000000000 -0800 +++ at91/scripts/mod/modpost.c 2007-01-12 04:20:00.000000000 -0800 @@ -679,6 +679,26 @@ static Elf_Sym *find_elf_symbol(struct e } /* + * If there's no name there, ignore it; likewise, ignore it if it's + * one of the magic symbols emitted used by current ARM tools. + * + * Otherwise if find_symbols_between() returns those symbols, they'll + * fail the whitelist tests and cause lots of false alarms ... fixable + * only by shrinking __exit and __init sections into __text, bloating + * the kernel (which is especially evil on embedded platforms). + */ +static int is_valid_name(struct elf_info *elf, Elf_Sym *sym) +{ + const char *name = elf->strtab + sym->st_name; + + if (!name || !strlen(name)) + return 0; + if (strcmp(name, "$a") == 0 || strcmp(name, "$d") == 0) + return 0; + return 1; +} + +/* * Find symbols before or equal addr and after addr - in the section sec. * If we find two symbols with equal offset prefer one with a valid name. * The ELF format may have a better way to detect what type of symbol @@ -706,16 +726,15 @@ static void find_symbols_between(struct symsec = secstrings + elf->sechdrs[sym->st_shndx].sh_name; if (strcmp(symsec, sec) != 0) continue; + if (!is_valid_name(elf, sym)) + continue; if (sym->st_value <= addr) { if ((addr - sym->st_value) < beforediff) { beforediff = addr - sym->st_value; *before = sym; } else if ((addr - sym->st_value) == beforediff) { - /* equal offset, valid name? */ - const char *name = elf->strtab + sym->st_name; - if (name && strlen(name)) - *before = sym; + *before = sym; } } else @@ -725,10 +744,7 @@ static void find_symbols_between(struct *after = sym; } else if ((sym->st_value - addr) == afterdiff) { - /* equal offset, valid name? */ - const char *name = elf->strtab + sym->st_name; - if (name && strlen(name)) - *after = sym; + *after = sym; } } } - To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-kernel" in the body of a message to [EMAIL PROTECTED] More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html Please read the FAQ at http://www.tux.org/lkml/