The current versions of these two macros don't work correctly if the
argument expression happens to contain a modulo operator (%) -- when
stringified, it gets interpreted as a printf formatting character!
With a specifically crafted parameter, this could probably cause a
kernel OOPS; consider WARN_ON(p%s) or WARN_ON(f %*pEp).
Instead, we should use an explicit "%s" format, with the stringified
expression as the coresponding literal-string argument.
Signed-off-by: Dave Gordon <david.s.gordon@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Paulo Zanoni <paulo.r.zanoni@intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Daniel Vetter <daniel.vetter@ffwll.ch>
BUILD_BUG_ON(__i915_warn_cond); \
WARN(__i915_warn_cond, "WARN_ON(" #x ")"); })
#else
-#define WARN_ON(x) WARN((x), "WARN_ON(" #x ")")
+#define WARN_ON(x) WARN((x), "WARN_ON(%s)", #x )
#endif
#undef WARN_ON_ONCE
-#define WARN_ON_ONCE(x) WARN_ONCE((x), "WARN_ON_ONCE(" #x ")")
+#define WARN_ON_ONCE(x) WARN_ONCE((x), "WARN_ON_ONCE(%s)", #x )
#define MISSING_CASE(x) WARN(1, "Missing switch case (%lu) in %s\n", \
(long) (x), __func__);