commit
cea15092f098b7018e89f64a5a14bb71955965d5 upstream.
cyc_to_sched_clock() is called by sched_clock() and cyc_to_ns()
is called by cyc_to_sched_clock(). I suspect that some compilers
inline both of these functions into sched_clock() and so we've
been getting away without having a notrace marking. It seems that
my compiler isn't inlining cyc_to_sched_clock() though, so I'm
hitting a recursion bug when I enable the function graph tracer,
causing my system to crash. Marking these functions notrace fixes
it. Technically cyc_to_ns() doesn't need the notrace because it's
already marked inline, but let's just add it so that if we ever
remove inline from that function it doesn't blow up.
Signed-off-by: Stephen Boyd <sboyd@codeaurora.org>
Signed-off-by: Russell King <rmk+kernel@arm.linux.org.uk>
Signed-off-by: Jonghwan Choi <jhbird.choi@samsung.com>
Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@linuxfoundation.org>
static u32 __read_mostly (*read_sched_clock)(void) = jiffy_sched_clock_read;
-static inline u64 cyc_to_ns(u64 cyc, u32 mult, u32 shift)
+static inline u64 notrace cyc_to_ns(u64 cyc, u32 mult, u32 shift)
{
return (cyc * mult) >> shift;
}
-static unsigned long long cyc_to_sched_clock(u32 cyc, u32 mask)
+static unsigned long long notrace cyc_to_sched_clock(u32 cyc, u32 mask)
{
u64 epoch_ns;
u32 epoch_cyc;