Re: git: a4e4132fa3bf - main - swapoff(2): replace special device name argument with a structure
- Reply: Konstantin Belousov : "Re: git: a4e4132fa3bf - main - swapoff(2): replace special device name argument with a structure"
- In reply to: Jessica Clarke : "Re: git: a4e4132fa3bf - main - swapoff(2): replace special device name argument with a structure"
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Date: Sun, 05 Dec 2021 19:38:52 UTC
On 5 Dec 2021, at 12:56, Jessica Clarke wrote: > On 5 Dec 2021, at 18:51, Konstantin Belousov <kostikbel@gmail.com> wrote: >> On Sun, Dec 05, 2021 at 05:14:54PM +0000, Jessica Clarke wrote: >>> On 5 Dec 2021, at 13:22, Konstantin Belousov <kostikbel@gmail.com> wrote: >>>> >>>> On Sun, Dec 05, 2021 at 03:03:26AM +0000, Jessica Clarke wrote: >>>>> On 4 Dec 2021, at 22:21, Konstantin Belousov <kib@FreeBSD.org> wrote: >>>>>> >>>>>> The branch main has been updated by kib: >>>>>> >>>>>> URL: https://cgit.FreeBSD.org/src/commit/?id=a4e4132fa3bfadb6047fc0fa5f399f4640460300 >>>>>> >>>>>> commit a4e4132fa3bfadb6047fc0fa5f399f4640460300 >>>>>> Author: Konstantin Belousov <kib@FreeBSD.org> >>>>>> AuthorDate: 2021-11-29 16:26:31 +0000 >>>>>> Commit: Konstantin Belousov <kib@FreeBSD.org> >>>>>> CommitDate: 2021-12-04 22:20:58 +0000 >>>>>> >>>>>> swapoff(2): replace special device name argument with a structure >>>>>> >>>>>> For compatibility, add a placeholder pointer to the start of the >>>>>> added struct swapoff_new_args, and use it to distinguish old vs. new >>>>>> style of syscall invocation. >>>>>> >>>>>> Reviewed by: markj >>>>>> Discussed with: alc >>>>>> Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation >>>>>> MFC after: 1 week >>>>>> Differential revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D33165 >>>>>> --- >>>>>> sys/vm/swap_pager.c | 27 +++++++++++++++++++++++++-- >>>>>> sys/vm/swap_pager.h | 8 ++++++++ >>>>>> 2 files changed, 33 insertions(+), 2 deletions(-) >>>>>> >>>>>> diff --git a/sys/vm/swap_pager.c b/sys/vm/swap_pager.c >>>>>> index 165373d1b527..dc1df79f4fcd 100644 >>>>>> --- a/sys/vm/swap_pager.c >>>>>> +++ b/sys/vm/swap_pager.c >>>>>> @@ -2491,15 +2491,38 @@ sys_swapoff(struct thread *td, struct swapoff_args *uap) >>>>>> struct vnode *vp; >>>>>> struct nameidata nd; >>>>>> struct swdevt *sp; >>>>>> - int error; >>>>>> + struct swapoff_new_args sa; >>>>>> + int error, probe_byte; >>>>>> >>>>>> error = priv_check(td, PRIV_SWAPOFF); >>>>>> if (error) >>>>>> return (error); >>>>>> >>>>>> + /* >>>>>> + * Detect old vs. new-style swapoff(2) syscall. The first >>>>>> + * pointer in the memory pointed to by uap->name is NULL for >>>>>> + * the new variant. >>>>>> + */ >>>>>> + probe_byte = fubyte(uap->name); >>>>>> + switch (probe_byte) { >>>>>> + case -1: >>>>>> + return (EFAULT); >>>>>> + case 0: >>>>>> + error = copyin(uap->name, &sa, sizeof(sa)); >>>>>> + if (error != 0) >>>>>> + return (error); >>>>>> + if (sa.flags != 0) >>>>>> + return (EINVAL); >>>>>> + break; >>>>>> + default: >>>>>> + bzero(&sa, sizeof(sa)); >>>>>> + sa.name = uap->name; >>>>>> + break; >>>>>> + } >>>>> >>>>> Doesn’t this change the semantics of swapoff("")? >>>>> >>>>> Previously it would fail deterministically, presumably with ENOENT or >>>>> something, but now it reinterprets whatever follows that string in >>>>> memory as the new argument structure. It probably doesn’t matter, but >>>>> this approach is ugly. Can we not just define a new syscall rather than >>>>> this kind of bodge? >>>> >>>> Having two swapoff() syscalls is worse, and having them only differ in >>>> semantic by single flag is kind of crime. >>>> >>>> I do not see swapoff("") as problematic, we are changing a minor semantic of >>>> the management syscall. I only wanted to avoid flag day for swapoff binaries. >>>> >>>> BTW, I considered requiring proper alignment for uap->name, and then checking >>>> the whole uap->name_old_syscall for NULL, but then decided that this is >>>> overkill. If you think that swapoff("") that important, I can add that >>>> additional verification. >>> >>> Why’s it worse? It’s just a syscall number, you deprecate the old one >>> and move on, we do that for things relatively regularly. This is really >>> not a good solution; harder to use as a caller since the prototype is >>> wrong, impossible to ensure you preserve the semantics for the existing >>> interface in all cases, and ugly to implement. You don’t need a flag >>> day for a new syscall, either, you can continue to only use the new >>> method for -f for a release and then switch over to the new syscall >>> entirely. Or switch over to the new syscall entirely now and fall back >>> on the old syscall if -f isn’t passed. Defining a new syscall also lets >>> you not need the name_old_syscall member in the struct, and gives you a >>> clean, fully-extensible syscall to which future features can be added >>> in a backwards-compatible way, rather than forever keeping around this >>> legacy mess. >> >> I disagree, it is not just a syscall number, it is whole user/kernel >> interface that bloats, which means cognitive efforts from anybody using >> this interfaces, and for which we must maintain ABI compatibility. > > Which is just as true of this approach; you have the same two > interfaces here, just smashed together into a single harder-to-use > syscall rather than two separate syscalls. Having a separate syscall at > least allows the old one to return ENOSYS in the future, whereas if you > ever want to deprecate the old interface with this method then you’ll > need some other weird error response that’s harder to interpret as > meaning “that variant of this syscall doesn’t exist any more”. > >> New syscall allocation should be done only as a last resort, when existing >> interfaces cannot be adopted for new functionality. > > Which this can’t without breaking the existing well-defined semantics, > as I’ve stated. > >> Good (or rather, bad) example of the uglyness that is backed by the attitude >> that syscalls are free, is whole *at() mess, or specific stat*() mess (old, >> other bsds, pre-ino64, ino64, at, then stat vs fstat, then Linux statx which >> probably fixes the interface ultimately). > > It’s better than this approach. I have less resistance to adding new syscalls, and I agree with Jess that it is the right thing to do in this case. Adding a syscall means the kernel supports either old or new interface, so there is no flag day. And it is easier to clean up; maintaining two syscalls should only be needed for a while on -current, and not in any release. Mike > Jess