[PATCH 08/24] Allow a 32bit ABI to use the naming of the 64bit ABI syscalls to avoid confusion of not splitting the registers
Catalin Marinas
catalin.marinas at arm.com
Thu Oct 2 04:19:51 PDT 2014
On Wed, Oct 01, 2014 at 03:00:54PM +0100, Arnd Bergmann wrote:
> On Wednesday 01 October 2014 13:42:27 Catalin Marinas wrote:
> > On Thu, Sep 04, 2014 at 11:11:04AM +0100, Arnd Bergmann wrote:
> > > On Wednesday 03 September 2014 14:19:02 Andrew Pinski wrote:
> > > > + * For 32bit abis where 64bit can be passed via one
> > > > + * register, use the same naming as the 64bit ones
> > > > + * as they will only have a 64 bit off_t.
> > > > */
> > > > -#if __BITS_PER_LONG == 64 && !defined(__SYSCALL_COMPAT)
> > > > +#if (__BITS_PER_LONG == 64 && !defined(__SYSCALL_COMPAT)) || \
> > > > + defined(__ARCH_WANT_64BIT_SYSCALLS)
> > >
> > > I'm not sure if __ARCH_WANT_64BIT_SYSCALLS is the best name for
> > > this, since it's really only about off_t. It took me a while
> > > to understand what you are doing here.
> >
> > I'm not sure I fully get it yet. So with this change, we avoid using
> > syscall numbers like __NR_ftruncate64 in favour of __NR_ftruncate. Why?
> > (maybe there's a valid reason, just not getting it).
>
> glibc depends on the name to decide which calling conventions it
> uses. I assume this is the same on IPL32 ARM.
>
> The general rule is that on a 32-bit architecture, __NR_ftruncate refers
> to the system call that takes a 32-bit off_t argument, while __NR_ftruncate64
> refers to the syscall that takes a 64-bit loff_t.
>
> I would assume that the new ABI does not actually allow using 32-bit off_t
> in applications (that would be silly) and defaults to using 64-bit offsets,
> but it still needs to generate the right system calls.
OK, so since ILP32 would have a 64-bit off_t, we want to use
__NR_ftruncate and sys_ftruncate with the off_t argument (rather than
loff_t).
> > Either way, ILP32 would still end up calling sys_ftruncate64() (rather
> > than the native sys_ftruncate()).
>
> sys_ftruncate64 does not exist in 64-bit kernels, it can either call
> compat_sys_ftruncate64_wrapper or sys_ftruncate. I'd assume it would
> call the latter and pass a single 64-bit register, but that is another
> matter.
I think I get it now. Just for the record, we define __NR_ftruncate to
__NR3264_ftruncate. When we build the syscall table as per patch 21/24,
given that the kernel is built with __LP64__, we get the following
macros for the syscall function name:
#define __SC_3264(_nr, _32, _64) __SYSCALL(_nr, _64)
#define __SC_COMP_3264(_nr, _32, _64, _comp) __SC_3264(_nr, _32, _64)
...
__SC_COMP_3264(__NR3264_ftruncate, sys_ftruncate64, sys_ftruncate, \
compat_sys_ftruncate64)
Which would result in using sys_ftruncate rather than sys_ftruncate64.
I agree, maybe the name could be __ARCH_WANT_64BIT_OFF_T as that's the
only reason for these definitions.
--
Catalin
More information about the linux-arm-kernel
mailing list