Re: Kernel version numbers after 4.9.255 and 4.4.255

From: Greg Kroah-Hartman
Date: Sat Feb 06 2021 - 02:22:23 EST


On Fri, Feb 05, 2021 at 07:11:05PM +0100, Mauro Carvalho Chehab wrote:
> Em Fri, 5 Feb 2021 12:31:05 -0500
> Tony Battersby <tonyb@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> escreveu:
>
> > On 2/4/21 6:00 AM, Jiri Slaby wrote:
> > > Agreed. But currently, sublevel won't "wrap", it will "overflow" to
> > > patchlevel. And that might be a problem. So we might need to update the
> > > header generation using e.g. "sublevel & 0xff" (wrap around) or
> > > "sublevel > 255 : 255 : sublevel" (be monotonic and get stuck at 255).
> > >
> > > In both LINUX_VERSION_CODE generation and KERNEL_VERSION proper.
> >
> > My preference would be to be monotonic and get stuck at 255 to avoid
> > breaking out-of-tree modules.  If needed, add another macro that
> > increases the number of bits that can be used to check for sublevels >
> > 255, while keeping the old macros for compatibility reasons.  Since
> > sublevels > 255 have never existed before, any such checks must be
> > newly-added, so they can be required to use the new macros.
> >
> > I do not run the 4.4/4.9 kernels usually, but I do sometimes test a wide
> > range of kernels from 3.18 (gasp!) up to the latest when bisecting,
> > benchmarking, or debugging problems.  And I use a number of out-of-tree
> > modules that rely on the KERNEL_VERSION to make everything work.  Some
> > out-of-tree modules like an updated igb network driver might be needed
> > to make it possible to test the old kernel on particular hardware.
> >
> > In the worst case, I can patch LINUX_VERSION_CODE and KERNEL_VERSION
> > locally to make out-of-tree modules work.  Or else just not test kernels
> > with sublevel > 255.
>
> Overflowing LINUX_VERSION_CODE breaks media applications. Several media
> APIs have an ioctl that returns the Kernel version:
>
> drivers/media/cec/core/cec-api.c: caps.version = LINUX_VERSION_CODE;
> drivers/media/mc/mc-device.c: info->media_version = LINUX_VERSION_CODE;
> drivers/media/v4l2-core/v4l2-ioctl.c: cap->version = LINUX_VERSION_CODE;
> drivers/media/v4l2-core/v4l2-subdev.c: cap->version = LINUX_VERSION_CODE;

This always struck me as odd, because why can't they just use the
uname(2) syscall instead?

> Those can be used by applications in order to enable some features that
> are available only after certain Kernel versions.
>
> This is somewhat deprecated, in favor of the usage of some other
> capability fields, but for instance, the v4l2-compliance userspace tool
> have two such checks:
>
> utils/v4l2-compliance/v4l2-compliance.cpp
> 640: fail_on_test((vcap.version >> 16) < 3);
> 641: if (vcap.version >= 0x050900) // Present from 5.9.0 onwards
>
> As far as I remember, all such checks are against major.minor. So,
> something like:
>
> sublevel = (sublevel > 0xff) ? 0xff : sublevel;
>
> inside KERNEL_VERSION macro should fix such regression at -stable.

I think if we clamp KERNEL_VERSION at 255 we should be fine for anyone
checking this type of thing. Sasha has posted patches to do this.

thanks,

greg k-h