Re: CONFIG_* used by user-space to figure out whether a feature ison/off

From: Raymond Jennings
Date: Mon Jul 15 2013 - 20:47:06 EST


On Mon, 2013-07-15 at 10:17 -0700, Linus Torvalds wrote:
> On Mon, Jul 15, 2013 at 8:40 AM, Konrad Rzeszutek Wilk
> <konrad.wilk@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
> >
> > I am hoping you can help me draw an understanding and a line in sand whether:
> > a) Tools should not depend on /proc/config.gz to figure out whether
> > a kernel has some CONFIG_X=y feature.
>
> Well, /proc/config.gz is better than some crazy saved-off config file,
> since it at least is guaranteed to match the kernel you're running,
> but it's still a completely crazy idea. Not the least because it's not
> at all guaranteed to be there, and even if it's there, we'll rename
> config options without caring one whit. It's meant for "make
> oldconfig" style stuff, nothing more. Any user program that depends on
> it is broken by design.
>
> > b) If they are OK to do so, what do we do when certain CONFIG_X options
> > get reworked/removed. Would they be considered regressions? Aka
> > is this similar to 'you shall not break user-space'?
>
> Absolutely not. If you depend on any config file, you're broken by
> definition. The only thing that can depend on the config file is the
> kernel tree itself, and even then we happily break that at any time
> (ie "make oldconfig" is meant to give an _approximation_ of the old
> config, but if some config option gets renamed, the old value is
> thrown away without question, and the new name is asked about).
>
> > Irrespective of that, do you have any ideas of how a user-space program (say GRUB)
> > can figure out whether the configuration stanze it generates is supported by
> > the kernel.

I'd like to point out that Google Chrome also makes use of CONFIG_ tests
to detect support for namespaces and pid containers and stuff.

> If you don't want to answer this question - since this might
> > open a can of worms you prefer not to deal with - that is absolutly OK.
>
> I think grub should stop trying to be clever. Quite frankly, from my
> own experience, grub has become too clever by half, and become harder
> to use and configure as a result. Just don't do it.
>
> If you want to have grub Xen options for the kernel, make them grub
> options. In the grub config file. And if that option isn't there, just
> boot it as a native kernel. That had better work anyway, and is a hell
> of a lot more flexible and stable anyway. Don't try to be clever, and
> certainly don't try to parse some random config file that may or may
> not even match the kernel you're booting.
>
> Linus
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