[PATCH 09/13] tools/nolibc: sys_poll: riscv: use __NR_ppoll_time64 for rv32
Willy Tarreau
w at 1wt.eu
Sun May 28 04:03:05 PDT 2023
On Sun, May 28, 2023 at 12:55:47PM +0200, Arnd Bergmann wrote:
> On Sun, May 28, 2023, at 12:29, Willy Tarreau wrote:
> > On Sun, May 28, 2023 at 04:25:09PM +0800, Zhangjin Wu wrote:
> >>
> >> * Use __kernel_timespec as timespec
> >> * Use 64bit time_t based struct timeval
> >> * Disable gettimeofday syscall completely for 32bit platforms
> >> * And disable the gettimeofday_bad1/2 test case too
> >
> > When you say "disable", you mean "remap", right ? Or do you mean
> > "break in 2023 code that was expected to break only in 2038 after
>
> clock_gettime() has been supported for a very long time, so both
> time() and gettimeofday() can be trivial wrappers around that.
OK, that's what I wanted to clarify. I understood "drop" in the sense
of, well, "drop" :-)
> Nothing really should be using the timezone argument, so I'd
> just ignore that in nolibc. (it's a little trickier for /sbin/init
> setting the initial timezone, but I hope we can ignore that here).
Yes I'm fine with this approach.
> clock_gettime() as a function call that takes a timespec argument
> in turn should be a wrapper around either sys_clock_gettime64 (on
> 32-bit architectures) or sys_clock_gettime_old() (on 64-bit
> architectures, or as a fallback on old 32-bit kernels after
> clock_gettime64 fails).
Sounds good to me.
> On normal libc implementations, the low-level
> sys_clock_gettime64() and sys_clock_gettime_old(), whatever
> they are named, would call vdso first and then fall back
> to the syscall, but I don't think that's necessary for nolibc.
Indeed, we don't exploit the VDSO here since it's essentially useful
for performance and that's not what we're seeking.
> I'd define them the same as the kernel, with
> sys_clock_gettime64() taking a __kernel_timespec, and
> sys_clock_gettime_old() takeing a __kernel_old_timespec.
Sounds good, thanks Arnd!
Willy
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