Date: Wed, 04 Feb 2009 15:54:41 +0100 From: Christoph Mallon <christoph.mallon@gmx.de> To: Christian Peron <csjp@freebsd.org> Cc: FreeBSD Hackers <freebsd-hackers@freebsd.org>, FreeBSD Current <freebsd-current@freebsd.org> Subject: Re: write-only variables in src/sys/ - possible bugs Message-ID: <4989AC31.6000904@gmx.de> In-Reply-To: <20090203231155.GA69101@jnz.sqrt.ca> References: <49874CA8.5090605@gmx.de> <20090203231155.GA69101@jnz.sqrt.ca>
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Christian Peron schrieb: > I started following up on this and ran into an issue for these: > > sys/net/bpf_buffer.c:133: warning: variable 'dst' is never read > sys/net/bpf_buffer.c:134: warning: variable 'count' is never read > sys/net/bpf_buffer.c:142: warning: variable 'dst' is never read > > > /* > * Scatter-gather data copy from an mbuf chain to the current kernel buffer. > */ > void > bpf_buffer_append_mbuf(struct bpf_d *d, caddr_t buf, u_int offset, void *src, > u_int len) > { > const struct mbuf *m; > u_char *dst; > u_int count; > > m = (struct mbuf *)src; > dst = (u_char *)buf + offset; > while (len > 0) { > if (m == NULL) > panic("bpf_mcopy"); > count = min(m->m_len, len); > bcopy(mtod(m, void *), dst, count); > m = m->m_next; > [..] > > Does it not consider being passed as an argument to a function as > being read? Yes, function arguments are considered being read. The problem is different here: mtod() should be a macro, but the macro declaration was missing (*cough* hacked build process *cough*). So the parser tried to parse this as function call. Then it hit the "void *", which confused it - it got a type while parsing an expression. I improved the error correction, resolved a few other problems, too, and generated a new list: http://tron.homeunix.org/unread_variables.log (The list has a date at the top, if it is missing, you see the old list in your browser cache) The false positives, which you mentioned, are gone now - thanks for reporting this. The list now contains about 1.000 entries and about 60 concern variables named 'error'.
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