Greg, could you comment on this since there are some people having
trouble figuring out what's going on with VM-related /proc/ fields for
!CONFIG_MMU. Please forgive the top-posting, it made more sense to
quote the text below in this instance.
On Tue, Sep 14, 2004 at 07:59:46AM +0200, Roger Luethi wrote:
I agree with you that those specific fields should be offered for
!CONFIG_MMU. However, if for some reason they cannot carry a value
that fits the field description, they should not be offered at all. The
ambiguity of having 0 mean either "0" or "this field is not available"
is bad. Trying to read a specific field _can_ fail, and applications
had better handle that case (it's still trivial compared to having to
parse different /proc file layouts depending on the configuration).
On Mon, Sep 13, 2004 at 11:18:00PM -0700, William Lee Irwin III wrote:
Apart from doing something it's supposed to for !CONFIG_MMU and using
the internal kernel accounting I set up for the CONFIG_MMU=y case I'm
not very concerned about this. I have a vague notion there should
probably be some consistency with the /proc/ precedent but am not
particularly tied to it. We should probably ask Greg Ungerer (the
maintainer of the external MMU-less patches) about what he prefers
since it's likely we can't anticipate all of the !CONFIG_MMU concerns.
On Tue, Sep 14, 2004 at 07:59:46AM +0200, Roger Luethi wrote:
The presumed wrong assumptions underlying broken tools of the future
are not a good base for designing a new interface. My interest is in
making it easy to write correct applications (or in fixing broken apps
that won't work, say, on !CONFIG_MMU systems).