Commit e4b2b0b1 authored by Linus Torvalds's avatar Linus Torvalds

Merge tag 'kcsan.2024.07.12a' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/paulmck/linux-rcu

Pull KCSAN updates from Paul McKenney:

 - improve the documentation for the new __data_racy type qualifier
   to the data_race() macro's kernel-doc header and to the LKMM's
   access-marking documentation

 - add missing MODULE_DESCRIPTION

* tag 'kcsan.2024.07.12a' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/paulmck/linux-rcu:
  kcsan: Add missing MODULE_DESCRIPTION() macro
  kcsan: Add example to data_race() kerneldoc header
parents b176e21d ddd7432d
......@@ -194,9 +194,17 @@ void ftrace_likely_update(struct ftrace_likely_data *f, int val,
* This data_race() macro is useful for situations in which data races
* should be forgiven. One example is diagnostic code that accesses
* shared variables but is not a part of the core synchronization design.
* For example, if accesses to a given variable are protected by a lock,
* except for diagnostic code, then the accesses under the lock should
* be plain C-language accesses and those in the diagnostic code should
* use data_race(). This way, KCSAN will complain if buggy lockless
* accesses to that variable are introduced, even if the buggy accesses
* are protected by READ_ONCE() or WRITE_ONCE().
*
* This macro *does not* affect normal code generation, but is a hint
* to tooling that data races here are to be ignored.
* to tooling that data races here are to be ignored. If the access must
* be atomic *and* KCSAN should ignore the access, use both data_race()
* and READ_ONCE(), for example, data_race(READ_ONCE(x)).
*/
#define data_race(expr) \
({ \
......
......@@ -1620,5 +1620,6 @@ static struct kunit_suite kcsan_test_suite = {
kunit_test_suites(&kcsan_test_suite);
MODULE_DESCRIPTION("KCSAN test suite");
MODULE_LICENSE("GPL v2");
MODULE_AUTHOR("Marco Elver <elver@google.com>");
......@@ -25,6 +25,11 @@ The Linux kernel provides the following access-marking options:
4. WRITE_ONCE(), for example, "WRITE_ONCE(a, b);"
The various forms of atomic_set() also fit in here.
5. __data_racy, for example "int __data_racy a;"
6. KCSAN's negative-marking assertions, ASSERT_EXCLUSIVE_ACCESS()
and ASSERT_EXCLUSIVE_WRITER(), are described in the
"ACCESS-DOCUMENTATION OPTIONS" section below.
These may be used in combination, as shown in this admittedly improbable
example:
......@@ -206,6 +211,23 @@ because doing otherwise prevents KCSAN from detecting violations of your
code's synchronization rules.
Use of __data_racy
------------------
Adding the __data_racy type qualifier to the declaration of a variable
causes KCSAN to treat all accesses to that variable as if they were
enclosed by data_race(). However, __data_racy does not affect the
compiler, though one could imagine hardened kernel builds treating the
__data_racy type qualifier as if it was the volatile keyword.
Note well that __data_racy is subject to the same pointer-declaration
rules as are other type qualifiers such as const and volatile.
For example:
int __data_racy *p; // Pointer to data-racy data.
int *__data_racy p; // Data-racy pointer to non-data-racy data.
ACCESS-DOCUMENTATION OPTIONS
============================
......@@ -343,7 +365,7 @@ as follows:
Because foo is read locklessly, all accesses are marked. The purpose
of the ASSERT_EXCLUSIVE_WRITER() is to allow KCSAN to check for a buggy
concurrent lockless write.
concurrent write, whether marked or not.
Lock-Protected Writes With Heuristic Lockless Reads
......
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