Re: RFD: x32 ABI system call numbers

From: H. Peter Anvin
Date: Thu Sep 01 2011 - 10:14:54 EST


On 09/01/2011 06:30 AM, Avi Kivity wrote:
> On 08/31/2011 08:09 PM, H. Peter Anvin wrote:
>>> I really think that "x32" should try to aim *VERY* hard at using the
>>> 64-bit system calls, and seeing itself as being a "32-bit application
>>> in a 64-bit world". That's not just true for time_t (which I think
>>> should be 64-bit on anything new that expects to survive for any
>>> amount of time), but in general.
>>
>> We're trying for it. The things we're trying to avoid is to muck (too
>> much) with the compat layer for the mega-multiplex system calls like
>> ioctl. We can't just use the 64-bit ioctl because ioctl structures
>> generally contain pointers.
>>
>
> struct iovec
> {
> void __user *iov_base; /* BSD uses caddr_t (1003.1g requires
> void *) */
> __kernel_size_t iov_len; /* Must be size_t (1003.1g) */
> } __attribute__((x32_abi_64));
>
> typedef long time_t __attribute__((x32_abi_64));
>
> The x32_abi_64 attribute converts pointers and longs back to 64-bit and
> adjusts the alignment accordingly. If we tag all userspace visible
> structures with this attribute, we can use the 64-bit ABI without changes.
>
> Issues:
> &my_iovec->iov_base yields something that is not a void ** (reads of a
> 64-bit pointer decay to a 32-bit pointer, writes zero extend).
> printf formats will break
> if someone embeds an iovec in a structure, it will occupy more space
> than expected
>

Yes, the idea of a compiler extension was floated... however, we'd
prefer not to go there if at all possible.

-hpa
--
To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-kernel" in
the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html
Please read the FAQ at http://www.tux.org/lkml/