Re: Official Linux system wrapper library?

From: Joseph Myers
Date: Mon Nov 12 2018 - 17:34:46 EST


On Mon, 12 Nov 2018, Florian Weimer wrote:

> For that use case, a machine-readable system call ABI specification is
> the only reasonable approach: Some people want inline system calls,

I also think it's much more likely to be of use to glibc than any syscall
library provided by the kernel. I don't think a syscall library provided
by the kernel is likely to be of use for implementing glibc functions, but
some kind of textual ABI specification might at least be of use for
checking that syscall macro calls / syscalls.list entries are consistent
with what the kernel thinks its ABI is. (Hopefully there would be
automated tests on the kernel side as well of some kind of consistency
between the ABI specification and the kernel.)

strace is indeed a more obvious potential consumer of such a description
of syscall ABIs.

I'd think a syscall library would more likely be something a few
applications would use if they want to access a syscall that for whatever
reason glibc doesn't have a wrapper for yet - not something useful for
glibc itself to call or link against.

> and for application programmer's sanity, make sure that the kernel adds
> generic system calls in a single version, across all architectures.

That would be strongly desirable for glibc as well - a way of ensuring
that the kernel rapidly fails CI tests and does not get released if new
syscalls are only present on some architectures (including e.g. being
missing from some compat syscall tables, or defined in asm/unistd.h but
not in the actual syscall table, or vice versa - or some way of making
sure such inconsistencies cannot occur by eliminating duplicate copies of
the syscall list information in the sources).

When we have compatibility code in glibc for the absence of some syscall,
we can only eliminate that code when the oldest kernel version supported
by glibc is new enough to have the syscall on whichever glibc architecture
was slowest to introduce the syscall in the kernel - and that can often be
years after the first architectures gained support for that syscall in the
kernel.

--
Joseph S. Myers
joseph@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx