Re: [PATCH v21 011/100] eclone (11/11): Document sys_eclone
From: Sukadev Bhattiprolu
Date: Wed Jun 09 2010 - 14:05:34 EST
Albert Cahalan [acahalan@xxxxxxxxx] wrote:
| On Tue, Jun 1, 2010 at 9:38 PM, Sukadev Bhattiprolu
| <sukadev@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
| > | Come on, seriously, you know it's ia64 and hppa that
| > | have issues. Maybe the nommu ports also have issues.
| > |
| > | The only portable way to specify the stack is base and offset,
| > | with flags or magic values for "share" and "kernel managed".
| >
| > Ah, ok, we have not yet ported to IA64 and I see now where the #ifdef
| > comes in.
| >
| > But are you saying that we should force x86 and other architectures to
| > specify base and offset for eclone() even though they currently specify
| > just the stack pointer to clone() ?
|
| Even for x86, it's an easier API. Callers would be specifying
| two numbers they already have: the argument and return value
| for malloc. Currently the numbers must be added together,
| destroying information, except on hppa (must not add size)
| and ia64 (must use what I'm proposing already).
I agree its easier and would avoid #ifdefs in the applications.
Peter, Arnd, Roland - do you have any concerns with requiring all
architectures to specify the stack to eclone() as [base, offset]
To recap, currently we have
struct clone_args {
u64 clone_flags_high;
/*
* Architectures can use child_stack for either the stack pointer or
* the base of of stack. If child_stack is used as the stack pointer,
* child_stack_size must be 0. Otherwise child_stack_size must be
* set to size of allocated stack.
*/
u64 child_stack;
u64 child_stack_size;
u64 parent_tid_ptr;
u64 child_tid_ptr;
u32 nr_pids;
u32 reserved0;
};
sys_eclone(u32 flags_low, struct clone_args * __user cargs, int cargs_size,
pid_t * __user pids)
Most architecutres would specify the stack pointer in ->child_stack and
ignore the ->child_stack_size.
IA64 specifies the *stack-base* in ->child_stack and the stack size in
->child_stack_size.
Albert and Randy point out that this would require #ifdefs in the
application code that intends to be portable across say IA64 and x86.
Can we instead have all architectures specify [base, size] ?
Thanks
Sukadev
--
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/