On Tue, Apr 23, 2024 at 12:15:47PM -0700, Sean Christopherson wrote:
On Tue, Apr 23, 2024, Andrew Jones wrote:
On Tue, Apr 23, 2024 at 07:56:01AM -0700, Sean Christopherson wrote:
+others
On Tue, Apr 23, 2024, Markus Elfring wrote:
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This patch will add the malloc failure checking
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Please use a corresponding imperative wording for the change description.
Would you like to add the tag “Fixes” accordingly?
Nah, don't bother with Fixes. OOM will cause the test to fail regardless, the fact that it gets an assert instead a NULL pointer deref is nice to have, but by no means does it fix a bug.
+++ b/tools/testing/selftests/kvm/x86_64/vmx_set_nested_state_test.c @@ -91,6 +91,7 @@ void test_vmx_nested_state(struct kvm_vcpu *vcpu) const int state_sz = sizeof(struct kvm_nested_state) + getpagesize(); struct kvm_nested_state *state = (struct kvm_nested_state *)malloc(state_sz);
- TEST_ASSERT(state, "-ENOMEM when allocating kvm state");
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Can “errno” be relevant for the error message construction?
Probably not, but there's also no reason to assume ENOMEM. TEST_ASSERT() spits out the actual errno, and we can just say something like "malloc() failed for blah blah blah".
But rather than keeping playing whack-a-mole, what if we add macros to perform allocations and assert on the result? I have zero interest in chasing down all of the "unsafe" allocations, and odds are very good that we'll collectively fail to enforce checking on new code.
E.g. something like (obviously won't compile, just for demonstration purposes)
#define kvm_malloc(x) ({ void *__ret;
__ret = malloc(x); TEST_ASSERT(__ret, "Failed malloc(" #x ")\n"); __ret; })
#define kvm_calloc(x, y) ({ void *__ret;
__ret = calloc(x, y); TEST_ASSERT(__ret, "Failed calloc(" #x ", " #y ")\n"); __ret; })
Sounds good to me, but I'd call them test_malloc, test_calloc, etc. and put them in include/test_util.h
Possibly terrible idea: what if we used kmalloc() and kcalloc()? K is for KVM :-)
That's a legit terrible idea... It probably would trigger more static checker warnings because the general policy is kmalloc() is kernel code and we *have* to test for errors.
To be honest, I would have just rejected the first patch. You obviously know this and have said this earlier in the thread but just for the other people, this is a userspace test that runs for a short time and then exits. If it gets killed because we don't have enough memory that's fine. It would be better to just fix the static checker to not print pointless warnings or educate people to ignore warnings like this.
Creating the test_malloc() to silence the warning also seems like an okay idea as well.
regards, dan carpenter