On Thu, May 06, 2021 at 03:30:45PM -0700, Linus Torvalds wrote: > [ You had a really odd Reply-to on this one ] > > On Mon, May 3, 2021 at 12:15 PM Daniel Vetter <daniel.vetter@xxxxxxxx> wrote: > > > > Anyway here's a small pull for you to ponder, now that the big ones are > > all through. > > Well, _now_ I'm all caught up. Knock wood. Anyway, time to look at it: > > > Follow-up to my pull from last merge window: kvm and vfio lost their > > very unsafe use of follow_pfn, this appropriately marks up the very > > last user for some userptr-as-buffer use-cases in media. There was > > some resistance to outright removing it, maybe we can do this in a few > > releases. > > Hmm. So this looks mostly ok to me, although I think the change to the > nommu case is pretty ridiculous. > > On nommu, unsafe_follow_pfn() should just be a wrapper around > follow_pfn(). There's no races when you can't remap anything. No? > > Do the two media cases even work on nommu? So personally I think the entire thing should just be thrown out, it's all levels of scary and we have zero-copy buffer sharing done properly with dma-buf since years in v4l. Iirc I've had that in some early versions of all this, but got nacked by some, supported by others from media as something that needs to go away. This here is now the next best thing as a fishing expedition to figure out whether there's actually anyone left who cares or not. That's also why the nommu case has the same checks, even though it's all fine there. Hopefully the answer is "no users" and then we could remove this in a year or two. > Finally - did you intend fo this to be a real pull request? Because > the email read to me like "think about this and tell me what you > think" rather than "please pull".. > > And I have now fulfilled that "think about and tell me" part ;) Ah yes I rushed this a bit between appreciating some local fires here at work and left out the instructions :-) Please pull or tell me whether you want the outright removal (like Christoph Hellwig also wants). Cheers, Daniel -- Daniel Vetter Software Engineer, Intel Corporation http://blog.ffwll.ch