Re: [PATCH v3 0/7] ia64: system call table generation support
From: Arnd Bergmann
Date: Fri Oct 12 2018 - 15:41:01 EST
On Fri, Oct 12, 2018 at 6:12 PM Luck, Tony <tony.luck@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:
>
> > I suspect the offset logic in the system call generation script had a bug. That
> > I fixed it in this patch series.
> >
> > Arnd and Eugene had shared few comments on adding new system call entry in the
> > table and some other things. Appreciate if you can review this patch
> > series so I can
> > finalize system call table implementation for ia64 architecture.
>
> The net effect of these is just to make it easier to add new system calls. Just
> edit the table, instead of editing entry.S and unistd.h picking the next number
> (and remembering to increase the NR_syscalls). Right?
The driving factor here is the addition of the new y2038 syscalls for 32-bit
architectures that we want to add everywhere at the same time. ia64
and alpha are obviously not affected by this as they are 64-bit only,
but to do it right, we should do all architectures together.
Another point is overall maintainability: it is very time-consuming and
error-prone to find out which architectures in which kernel version support
a specific system call or don't support it. Having a consistent way to
work on the tables should make this is a simple 'git grep'.
> I'm currently baffled at which linker magic makes the unsupported system
> calls alias to sys_ni_syscall.
This is the same method that x86, arm, and s390 have been using
for a while, by sorting the numbers and filling in the missing ones
in the script.
> I'm also uncertain whether allocating system call numbers and creating
> entry points for all the unsupported syscalls is the right thing to do. Might
> that puzzle and frustrate folks whose applications build, but then fail at
> run-time with -ENOSYS.
Again, we want this to be handled consistently across architectures
more than anything. At the moment, we have some architectures that
simply assign a number for each syscall added to x86, while others
don't. Similarly, some architectures drop the entries from unistd.h
if a syscall gets removed from the kernel, and others keep them.
I care less about which way we decide to go here, but I want it to
be done the same way for all architectures.
Arnd