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LLVM 19 related updates #1513
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LLVM 19 related updates #1513
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Not really happy with some of the changes. Can you provide a set of compiler messages describing why certain changes were made?
@@ -389,7 +389,7 @@ Panel* AffinityPanel_new(Machine* host, const Affinity* affinity, int* width) { | |||
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char number[16]; | |||
xSnprintf(number, 9, "CPU %d", Settings_cpuId(host->settings, i)); | |||
unsigned cpu_width = 4 + strlen(number); | |||
unsigned cpu_width = 4 + (unsigned) strlen(number); |
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unsigned cpu_width = 4 + (unsigned) strlen(number); | |
unsigned cpu_width = 4 + (unsigned)strlen(number); |
char *endptr; | ||
errno = 0; | ||
unsigned long res = strtoul(username, &endptr, 10); | ||
unsigned castRes = (unsigned) res; |
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unsigned castRes = (unsigned) res; | |
unsigned castRes = (unsigned)res; |
errno = 0; | ||
unsigned long res = strtoul(username, &endptr, 10); | ||
unsigned castRes = (unsigned) res; | ||
if (*endptr != '\0' || res == ULONG_MAX || errno != 0 || castRes != res) { |
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if (*endptr != '\0' || res == ULONG_MAX || errno != 0 || castRes != res) { | |
if (*endptr != '\0' || res == ULONG_MAX || errno != 0 || res > UINT_MAX) { |
or
if (*endptr != '\0' || res == ULONG_MAX || errno != 0 || castRes != res) { | |
if (*endptr != '\0' || res > UINT_MAX || errno != 0) { |
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@BenBE I would say res >= UINT_MAX
because, AFAIK, (uid_t)-1 is invalid.
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That's something the current version didn't check for …
DynamicMeter.c
Outdated
@@ -102,10 +102,11 @@ static void DynamicMeter_getUiName(const Meter* this, char* name, size_t length) | |||
if (meter) { | |||
const char* uiName = meter->caption; | |||
if (uiName) { | |||
int len = strlen(uiName); | |||
size_t len = strlen(uiName); | |||
assert(len < 32); |
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Given this is user-controlled via a config file, this should be a runtime check (DiD).
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What does the colon in this uiName
string do? And may I replace this strlen
call with (size_t)(String_strchrnul(uiName, ':') - uiName)
?
*pCommStart = (int)(tokenBase - cmdline); | ||
*pCommEnd = (int)(token - cmdline); |
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Given that these both refer to string offsets, we actually should switch to size_t*
eventually (DiD).
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The type after the substraction is technically ptrdiff_t
. Casting to int
would lose upper bits. Also, it's a signed type. (So size_t
won't fit, but maybe ssize_t
would.)
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Technically yes, but since tokenBase > cmdline
and token > cmdline
, both are positive and a cast to size_t
wouldn't cause trouble with the sign bit. I'd have to check re sentinel values, but that's another concern.
if (!map_devmaj && !map_devmin) | ||
continue; | ||
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map_inode = fast_strtoull_dec(&readptr, 0); | ||
map_inode = (unsigned int) fast_strtoull_dec(&readptr, 0); |
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map_inode = (unsigned int) fast_strtoull_dec(&readptr, 0); | |
map_inode = (unsigned int)fast_strtoull_dec(&readptr, 0); |
linux/LinuxProcessTable.c
Outdated
} | ||
continue; | ||
|
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No blank line here …
@@ -1015,13 +1011,13 @@ static void LinuxProcessTable_readOomData(LinuxProcess* process, openat_arg_t pr | |||
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char buffer[PROC_LINE_LENGTH + 1] = {0}; | |||
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ssize_t oomRead = xReadfileat(procFd, "oom_score", buffer, sizeof(buffer)); | |||
int oomRead = (int) xReadfileat(procFd, "oom_score", buffer, sizeof(buffer)); |
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Use ssize_t
instead.
size_t exeLen = process->procExe ? strlen(process->procExe) : 0; | ||
int exeLen = process->procExe ? (int) strlen(process->procExe) : 0; |
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What's wrong with size_t
here?
bool Vector_countEquals(const Vector* this, unsigned int expectedCount) { | ||
unsigned int n = 0; | ||
bool Vector_countEquals(const Vector* this, size_t expectedCount) { | ||
size_t n = 0; | ||
for (int i = 0; i < this->items; i++) { |
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Shouldn't this be updated to size_t
here too (I know this would add a cast to this->items
).
errno = 0; | ||
unsigned long res = strtoul(username, &endptr, 10); | ||
unsigned castRes = (unsigned) res; | ||
if (*endptr != '\0' || res == ULONG_MAX || errno != 0 || castRes != res) { |
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Before I can suggest a better code for this, I need one behavior clarified:
Is username
being an empty string acceptable here?
Because strtoul
would not produce an error for the empty string. It would happily return 0 as the result.
@@ -495,7 +495,8 @@ void Row_printRate(RichString* str, double rate, bool coloring) { | |||
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void Row_printLeftAlignedField(RichString* str, int attr, const char* content, unsigned int width) { | |||
int columns = width; | |||
RichString_appendnWideColumns(str, attr, content, strlen(content), &columns); | |||
size_t contentLen = strlen(content); | |||
RichString_appendnWideColumns(str, attr, content, (int)MINIMUM(contentLen, 1000), &columns); |
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I'm not sure I like this construct. If you want the cap the maximum length for a strlen
output, then strnlen
is there for use.
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Update: I've changed my mind on the use of strnlen
here. While strnlen
can guarantee it never reads past the specified maxlen
, strnlen
is (theoretically) less performant than strlen
when the input string is well formed already.
That doesn't mean I deny the possibility of using strnlen
in htop, but the length clamping, if needed, should be done as early as possible, e.g. in Settings.c
when reading the strings from config and not long after the config file was read.
Just using size_t
for strlen
return values would be slightly cheaper than using strnlen
.
@@ -111,7 +111,7 @@ struct Meter_ { | |||
unsigned int param; | |||
GraphData drawData; | |||
int h; | |||
int columnWidthCount; /**< only used internally by the Header */ | |||
size_t columnWidthCount; /**< only used internally by the Header */ |
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Can't understand the reason why expanding the bit width of this columnWidthCount
to 64. Would it save code size by saving some cast instructions?
@@ -428,22 +428,22 @@ void Row_printNanoseconds(RichString* str, unsigned long long totalNanoseconds, | |||
} | |||
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unsigned long long totalSeconds = totalMicroseconds / 1000000; | |||
unsigned long microseconds = totalMicroseconds % 1000000; | |||
unsigned int microseconds = totalMicroseconds % 1000000; |
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When I wrote this piece of Row_printNanoseconds
code, I did not assume the unsigned int
type would have 32 bits for you (for stricter standard compliance). I know what you are doing, but I would like uint32_t
be used here instead of unsigned int
.
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Also in favour of explicit bit width spec.
if (totalSeconds >= 10) { | ||
width--; | ||
fraction /= 10; | ||
} | ||
len = xSnprintf(buffer, sizeof(buffer), "%u.%0*lus ", (unsigned int)totalSeconds, width, fraction); | ||
len = xSnprintf(buffer, sizeof(buffer), "%u.%0*us ", (unsigned int)totalSeconds, width, fraction); |
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I would like this (unsigned long)
cast in snprintf
function be preserved unless you use PRIu32
format instead.
@@ -74,7 +74,7 @@ static void LinuxMachine_updateCPUcount(LinuxMachine* this) { | |||
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char* endp; | |||
unsigned long int id = strtoul(entry->d_name + 3, &endp, 10); | |||
if (id == ULONG_MAX || endp == entry->d_name + 3 || *endp != '\0') | |||
if (id == UINT_MAX || endp == entry->d_name + 3 || *endp != '\0') |
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if (id == UINT_MAX || endp == entry->d_name + 3 || *endp != '\0') | |
if (id >= UINT_MAX || endp == entry->d_name + 3 || *endp != '\0') |
if (oomRead < 1) { | ||
return; | ||
} | ||
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char* oomPtr = buffer; | ||
uint64_t oom = fast_strtoull_dec(&oomPtr, oomRead); | ||
unsigned long oom = fast_strtoul_dec(&oomPtr, oomRead); |
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We shouldn't use fast_strou*_dec
here, as these "fast" versions come with no overflow check.
By looking at the lines below, it seems like the overflow check is needed.
@@ -1485,9 +1485,9 @@ static bool LinuxProcessTable_recurseProcTree(LinuxProcessTable* this, openat_ar | |||
{ | |||
char* endptr; | |||
unsigned long parsedPid = strtoul(name, &endptr, 10); | |||
if (parsedPid == 0 || parsedPid == ULONG_MAX || *endptr != '\0') | |||
if (parsedPid == 0 || parsedPid >= INT_MAX || *endptr != '\0') |
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The logic doesn't look right here. Why would INT_MAX
become an invalid PID anyway? If we want to check for overflow, it could be parsedPid > INT_MAX || !errno
.
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strtoul
returns unsigned long
, but the result is later assigned to a field of unsigned int
. Thus anything greater than UINT_MAX
causes an integer overflow. Everything equal to UINT_MAX
is the sentinel value for "invalid user". Thus parsedPid >= UINT_MAX
to catch both cases at once.
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@BenBE This is PID, not UID. Please get the right context. POSIX didn't have a clear limit on the maximum value of PID, or that PID == INT_MAX is always invalid. So I want to play safe here.
Looking at this Stack Exchange question, it look like Linux currently has a hard limit of 4194303 (the maximum PID is one less than the value in /proc/sys/kernel/pid_max
). And that no other OS had been using INT_MAX as maximum PID yet, so treating INT_MAX as invalid value may be fine, for now.
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By the way, in Unix, pid_t
is always a signed type, unlike uid_t
. The pid_t
is required to be signed as fork(2) returns value in this type and that negative values are reserved for special uses.
Since there are changes in this PR that look not trivial. Would you guys mind if I pick some of the easier changes and file a new PR for them? I just hope some of the changes can be merged early. |
Settings* settings = st->host->settings; | ||
int s = 2; | ||
unsigned int s = 2; |
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I think for this algorithm, it's better for s
to be in size_t
, and use (size_t)x
(upcast) for comparisons below. I think I would submit my propsed change in a separate PR.
Most of the non-trivial changes in this PR boil down to structural refactorings where many fields that denote size values still use int instead of the more appropriate |
Enabled in LLVM 19
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