Re: [patch 2/5] signalfd v2 - signalfd core ...

From: Davide Libenzi
Date: Thu Mar 08 2007 - 14:22:24 EST


On Thu, 8 Mar 2007, Linus Torvalds wrote:

>
>
> On Thu, 8 Mar 2007, Davide Libenzi wrote:
> >
> > The reason for the special function, was not to provide a non-blocking
> > behaviour with zero timeout (that just a side effect), but to read the
> > siginfo. I was all about using read(2) (and v1 used it), but when you have
> > to transfer complex structures over it, it becomes hell. How do you
> > cleanly compat over a f_op->read callback for example?
>
> I agree that it gets a bit "interesting", and one option might be that the
> "read()" interface just gets the signal number and the minimal siginfo
> information, which is, after all, what 99% of all apps actually care
> about.
>
> But "siginfo_t" is really a *horrible* structure. Nobody sane should ever
> use siginfo_t, and the designer of that thing was so high on LSD that it's
> not even funny. Re-using fields in a union? Values that depend on other
> bits in the thing in random manners?
>
> In other words, I bet that we could just make it a *lot* better by making
> the read structure be:
>
> - 16 4-byte fields (fixed 64-byte packet), where each field is an
> uint32_t (we could even do it in network byte order if we care and if
> you want to just pipe the information from one machine to another, but
> that sounds a bit excessive ;)
>
> - Just put the fields people actually use at fixed offsets: si_signo,
> si_errno, si_pid, si_uid, si_band, si_fd.
>
> - that still leaves room for the other cases if anybody ever wants them
> (but I doubt it - things like si_addr are really only useful for
> synchronous signals that are actually done as *signals*, since you
> cannot defer a SIGBUS/SIGSEGV/SIGILL *anyway*).
>
> So I bet 99% of users actually just want si_signo, while some small subset
> might want the SIGCHLD info and some of the special cases (eg we migth
> want to add si_addr as a 64-bit thing just because the USB stack sends a
> SI_ASYNCIO thing for completed URB's, so a libusb might want it, but
> that's probably the only such user).
>
> And it would be *cleaner* than the mess that is siginfo_t..
>
> (I realize that siginfo_t is ugly because it built up over time, using the
> same buffer for many different things. I'm just saying that we can
> probably do better by *not* using it, and just laying things out in a
> cleaner manner to begin with, which also solves any compatibility issues)

I can do that, no problem. But isn't it better to recognize that this kind
of data just can't be shipped through a non compat-able function?
Like, for example, the current trend to say "just use u64 for a pointer,
it'll be fine". I remeber, a long time ago when the i386 architecture came
out, to say "Wow! 4GB is gonna last *forever*!", let's use u32 for
pointers. Well, forever is almost here in my watches. And all the
userspace code using APIs assuming to cleanly store a pointer in a u32
will have to be re-factored.
So, to cut it short, I can do the pseudo-siginfo read(2), but I don't
like it too much (little, actually). The siginfo, as bad as it is, is a
standard used in many POSIX APIs (hence even in kernel), and IMO if we
want to send that back, a struct siginfo should be.
No?



- Davide


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