On 01/30/18 11:55, Gustavo A. R. Silva wrote:
> 
> Quoting Hans Verkuil <hverk...@xs4all.nl>:
> 
>> On 01/30/2018 09:51 AM, Gustavo A. R. Silva wrote:
>>> Hi Hans,
>>>
>>> Quoting Hans Verkuil <hverk...@xs4all.nl>:
>>>
>>>> Hi Gustavo,
>>>>
>>>> On 01/30/2018 01:33 AM, Gustavo A. R. Silva wrote:
>>>>> Cast len to const u64 in order to avoid a potential integer
>>>>> overflow. This variable is being used in a context that expects
>>>>> an expression of type const u64.
>>>>>
>>>>> Addresses-Coverity-ID: 1454996 ("Unintentional integer overflow")
>>>>> Signed-off-by: Gustavo A. R. Silva <gust...@embeddedor.com>
>>>>> ---
>>>>>  drivers/media/platform/vivid/vivid-cec.c | 2 +-
>>>>>  1 file changed, 1 insertion(+), 1 deletion(-)
>>>>>
>>>>> diff --git a/drivers/media/platform/vivid/vivid-cec.c
>>>>> b/drivers/media/platform/vivid/vivid-cec.c
>>>>> index b55d278..30240ab 100644
>>>>> --- a/drivers/media/platform/vivid/vivid-cec.c
>>>>> +++ b/drivers/media/platform/vivid/vivid-cec.c
>>>>> @@ -83,7 +83,7 @@ static void vivid_cec_pin_adap_events(struct
>>>>> cec_adapter *adap, ktime_t ts,
>>>>>   if (adap == NULL)
>>>>>           return;
>>>>>   ts = ktime_sub_us(ts, (CEC_TIM_START_BIT_TOTAL +
>>>>> -                        len * 10 * CEC_TIM_DATA_BIT_TOTAL));
>>>>> +                        (const u64)len * 10 * CEC_TIM_DATA_BIT_TOTAL));
>>>>
>>>> This makes no sense. Certainly the const part is pointless. And given that
>>>> len is always <= 16 there definitely is no overflow.
>>>>
>>>
>>> Yeah, I understand your point and I know there is no chance of an
>>> overflow in this particular case.
>>>
>>>> I don't really want this cast in the code.
>>>>
>>>> Sorry,
>>>>
>>>
>>> I'm working through all the Linux kernel Coverity reports, and I
>>> thought of sending a patch for this because IMHO it doesn't hurt to
>>> give the compiler complete information about the arithmetic in which
>>> an expression is intended to be evaluated.
>>>
>>> I agree that the _const_ part is a bit odd. What do you think about
>>> the cast to u64 alone?
>>
>> What happens if you do: ((u64)CEC_TIM_START_BIT_TOTAL +
>>
>> I think that forces everything else in the expression to be evaluated
>> as u64.
>>
> 
> Well, in this case the operator precedence takes place and the  
> expression len * 10 * CEC_TIM_DATA_BIT_TOTAL is computed first. So the  
> issue remains the same.
> 
> I can switch the expressions as follows:
> 
> (u64)len * 10 * CEC_TIM_DATA_BIT_TOTAL + CEC_TIM_START_BIT_TOTAL

What about:

10ULL * len * ...

> 
> and avoid the cast in the middle.
> 
> What do you think?

My problem is that (u64)len suggests that there is some problem with len
specifically, which isn't true.

> 
>> It definitely needs a comment that this fixes a bogus Coverity report.
>>
> 
> I actually added the following line to the message changelog:
> Addresses-Coverity-ID: 1454996 ("Unintentional integer overflow")

That needs to be in the source, otherwise someone will remove the
cast (or ULL) at some time in the future since it isn't clear why
it is done. And nobody reads commit logs from X years back :-)

> 
> Certainly, I've run across multiple false positives as in this case,  
> but I have also fixed many actual bugs thanks to the Coverity reports.  
> So I think in general it is valuable to take a look into these  
> reports, either if they spot actual bugs or promote code correctness.

Regards,

        Hans

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