On Sun, 1 Oct 2006, Dong Feng wrote:
--- kernel/time.c.orig 2006-09-30 23:21:29.000000000 +0800
+++ kernel/time.c 2006-09-30 23:38:18.000000000 +0800
@@ -107,7 +107,16 @@ asmlinkage long sys_gettimeofday(struct
return -EFAULT;
}
if (unlikely(tz != NULL)) {
- if (copy_to_user(tz, &sys_tz, sizeof(sys_tz)))
+ struct timezone ktz;
+ unsigned long seq;
+
+ do {
+ seq = read_seqbegin(&xtime_lock);
+ ktz.tz_minuteswest = sys_tz.tz_minuteswest;
+ ktz.tz_dsttime = sys_tz.tz_dsttime;
+ } while (unlikely(read_seqretry(&xtime_lock, seq)));
+
+ if (copy_to_user(tz, &ktz, sizeof(ktz)))
return -EFAULT;
I really hate adding overhead to gettimeofday() and we would have to take the seqlock in all places when we reference tz. Maybe we can tolerate the resulting race?
If we assume word size transfers then we only have an issue on 32 bit platforms. The result of the race would be that tz_minuteswest and tz_dsttime disagree. So we may get daylight savings time wrong.
But then we are already changing the timezone and are potentially warping time.
gettimofday may be unstable anyways. So it may be okay to leave the race in. Just add some comments explaining the situation.