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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@gibson.dropbear.id.au> Signed-off-by: Stefano Brivio <sbrivio@redhat.com>
9 lines
201 B
Plaintext
9 lines
201 B
Plaintext
# tcp_sock_consume() calls recv() with MSG_TRUNC and no buffer to discard data
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{
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passt_recv_MSG_TRUNC_into_NULL_buffer
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Memcheck:Param
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socketcall.recvfrom(buf)
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...
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fun:tcp_sock_consume
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}
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