Re: [tip:x86/vdso] x86, vdso: Instead of dummy functions, include < linux/spinlock_up.h>

From: Stefani Seibold
Date: Mon Feb 17 2014 - 05:06:28 EST


Am Montag, den 17.02.2014, 01:50 -0800 schrieb H. Peter Anvin:
> On 02/17/2014 01:46 AM, Stefani Seibold wrote:
> > Am Montag, den 17.02.2014, 01:27 -0800 schrieb H. Peter Anvin:
> >> On 02/16/2014 11:42 PM, Stefani Seibold wrote:
> >>> I think for the first time it will be okay to kick out the
> >>> _ASM_X86_SPINLOCK_H hack and accept the C=1 warnings.
> >>>
> >>> At next step it is necessary to make the whole BUILD_VDSO32 path in
> >>> vclock_gettime.c independent from the kernel headers, only uapi/ should
> >>> be included.
> >>>
> >>> The use of cycle_t must be replaced with u64.
> >>>
> >>> We need a own copy of __native_read_tsc(), __iter_div_u64_rem, smp_rmb()
> >>> and cpu_relax().
> >>
> >> All of which are quite trivial.
> >>
> >>> For the non BUILD_VDSO32 path we must only move the #includes inside
> >>> this #ifndef BUILD_VDSO32
> >>
> >> Sorry, didn't quite follow that.
> >>
> >
> > The solution is quite simple: In case of a 32 bit VDSO for a 64 bit
> > kernel fake a 32 bit kernel configuration. Than everything is fine and
> > all kernel headers will compile without warnings or errors, also make
> > C=1 will give no complains.
> >
> > The arch/x86/vdso/vdso32/vclock_gettime.c will now look like:
> >
> > #define BUILD_VDSO32
> >
> > #ifdef CONFIG_X86_64
> >
> > /*
> > * in case of a 32 bit VDSO for a 64 bit kernel fake a 32 bit kernel
> > * configuration
> > */
> > #undef CONFIG_64BIT
> > #undef CONFIG_X86_64
> > #undef CONFIG_ILLEGAL_POINTER_VALUE
> >
> > #define CONFIG_X86_32 1
> > #define CONFIG_PAGE_OFFSET 0
> > #define CONFIG_ILLEGAL_POINTER_VALUE 0
> >
> > #define BUILD_VDSO32_64
> >
> > #endif
> >
> > #include "../vclock_gettime.c"
> >
> > and the following modifications for arch/x86/include/asm/vgtod.h:
> >
> > #ifdef BUILD_VDSO32_64
> > typedef u64 gtod_long_t;
> > #else
> > typedef unsigned long gtod_long_t;
> > #endif
> >
> > I tested it and i see no side effects. What do you think?
> >
>
> Clever. It is still a hack of course, and it would be better to getting
> to the point where we don't include random kernel headers but only uapi
> headers plus special headers sanitized specifically for the vdso, but
> the above looks like a good intermediate hack.
>

Yes, but i think this is nearly impossible, because there must be
modified a lot of headers and nobody can predict the side effects.

- Stefani


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