On Thu, 16 Nov 2023 16:43:49 +1100 David Gibson <david(a)gibson.dropbear.id.au> wrote:valgrind complains if we pass a NULL buffer to recv(), even if we use MSG_TRUNC, in which case it's actually safe. For a long time we've had a valgrind suppression for this. It singles out the recv() in tcp_sock_consume(), the only place we use MSG_TRUNC. However, tcp_sock_consume() only has a single caller, which makes it a prime candidate for inlining. If inlined, it won't appear on the stack and valgrind won't match the correct suppression. It appears that certain compiler versions (for example gcc-13.2.1 in Fedora 39) will inline this function even with the -O0 we use for valgrind builds. This breaks the suppression leading to a spurious failure in the tests. There's not really any way to adjust the suppression itself without making it overly broad (we don't want to match other recv() calls). So, as a hack explicitly prevent inlining of this function when we're making a valgrind build. To accomplish this add an explicit -DVALGRIND when making such a build. Signed-off-by: David Gibson <david(a)gibson.dropbear.id.au> --- Makefile | 2 +- tcp.c | 9 +++++++++ test/valgrind.supp | 3 +-- 3 files changed, 11 insertions(+), 3 deletions(-) diff --git a/Makefile b/Makefile index ff21459..57b2544 100644 --- a/Makefile +++ b/Makefile @@ -128,7 +128,7 @@ qrap: $(QRAP_SRCS) passt.h valgrind: EXTRA_SYSCALLS += rt_sigprocmask rt_sigtimedwait rt_sigaction \ getpid gettid kill clock_gettime mmap \ munmap open unlink gettimeofday futex -valgrind: FLAGS:=-g -O0 $(filter-out -O%,$(FLAGS)) +valgrind: FLAGS:=-g -O0 $(filter-out -O%,$(FLAGS)) -DVALGRIND valgrind: all .PHONY: clean diff --git a/tcp.c b/tcp.c index cfcd40a..b86d433 100644 --- a/tcp.c +++ b/tcp.c @@ -2097,6 +2097,15 @@ static void tcp_conn_from_tap(struct ctx *c, * * Return: 0 on success, negative error code from recv() on failure */ +#ifdef VALGRIND +/* valgrind doesn't realise that passing a NULL buffer to recv() is ok if using + * MSG_TRUNC. We have a supression for this in the tests, but it relies on^ pp (I can fix it up on merge but I guess you prefer to repost). Rest of the series looks good to me. -- Stefano