On Fri, 27 Apr 2018 09:14:17 +0200
Ingo Molnar <mi...@kernel.org> wrote:

> 
> * Masami Hiramatsu <mhira...@kernel.org> wrote:
> 
> > +   /*
> > +    * As long as kallsyms shows the address, kprobes blacklist also
> > +    * show it, Or, it shows null address and symbol.
> > +    */
> 
> Please _read_ the comments you write!
> 
> In which universe does a capitalized 'Or' make sense, even if we ignore the 
> various other spelling mistakes?

It's a typo. I mean "show it. Or, it shows..." anyway,

> 
> Also, that sentence is unnecessarily complex, just say this:
> 
> > +   /*
> > +    * If /proc/kallsyms is not showing kernel addresses then we won't show 
> > +      * them here either:
> > +    */

OK, look good to me.

> 
> But I'm unhappy about the messy typing and the messy code flow:
> 
> +       void *start = (void *)ent->start_addr, *end = (void *)ent->end_addr;
> 
> +       /*
> +        * As long as kallsyms shows the address, kprobes blacklist also
> +        * show it, Or, it shows null address and symbol.
> +        */
> +       if (!kallsyms_show_value())
> +               start = end = NULL;
> +
> +       seq_printf(m, "0x%px-0x%px\t%ps\n", start, end,
> +                  (void *)ent->start_addr);
> 
> 
> All three 'void *' type casts here are due to the bad type choices here:
> 
> struct kprobe_blacklist_entry {
>         struct list_head list;
>         unsigned long start_addr;
>         unsigned long end_addr;
> };
> 
> The natural type of ->start_addr and ->end_addr is 'void *', AFAICS this 
> would 
> remove some other type casts from the kprobes code as well, such as from the 
> arch_deref_entry_point()...

Would you really think we should handle all the address with 'void *'?
IOW, are there any policy that we handle the generic address by 'void *'
or 'unsigned long'?
For example, other address checker like kernel_text_address(),
module_text_address(), and ftrace_location() receive 'unsigned long'.
(only jump_label_text_reserved() using 'void *')

> 
> But the whole code flow introduced by this patch is messy as hell as well.
> Why cannot this do the obvious thing:
> 
>       if (!kallsyms_show_value())
>               seq_printf(m, "0x%px-0x%px\t%ps\n", NULL, NULL, 
> ent->start_addr);
>       else
>               seq_printf(m, "0x%px-0x%px\t%ps\n", ent->start_addr, 
> ent->end_addr, ent->start_addr);
> 
> ?

Both are OK to me. I just didn't want to repeat the printk format string there.

> 
> This variant eliminates the unnecessary complication over local variables and 
> makes it abundantly clear what gets printed and how.

Agreed, it may shorten the patch.

> ( Note that the kprobe_blacklist_entry type cleanup should still be done, 
>   regardless of code flow choices. )
> 
> Thanks,
> 
>       Ingo

Thank you,


-- 
Masami Hiramatsu <mhira...@kernel.org>

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