Re: [RFC]: mm,power: introduce MADV_WIPEONSUSPEND

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On Tue 07-07-20 10:01:23, Alexander Graf wrote:
> On 07.07.20 09:44, Michal Hocko wrote:
> > On Mon 06-07-20 14:52:07, Jann Horn wrote:
> > > On Mon, Jul 6, 2020 at 2:27 PM Alexander Graf <graf@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
> > > > Unless we create a vsyscall that returns both the PID as well as the
> > > > epoch and thus handles fork *and* suspend. I need to think about this a
> > > > bit more :).
> > > 
> > > You can't reliably detect forking by checking the PID if it is
> > > possible for multiple forks to be chained before the reuse check runs:
> > > 
> > >   - pid 1000 remembers its PID
> > >   - pid 1000 forks, creating child pid 1001
> > >   - pid 1000 exits and is waited on by init
> > >   - the pid allocator wraps around
> > >   - pid 1001 forks, creating child pid 1000
> > >   - child with pid 1000 tries to check for forking, determines that its
> > > PID is 1000, and concludes that it is still the original process
> > 
> > I must be really missing something here because I really fail to see why
> > there has to be something new even invented. Sure, checking for pid is
> > certainly a suboptimal solution because pids are terrible tokens to work
> > with. We do have a concept of file descriptors which a much better and
> > supports signaling. There is a clear source of the signal IIUC
> > (migration) and there are consumers to act upon that (e.g. crypto
> > backends). So what does really prevent to use a standard signal delivery
> > over fd for this usecase?
> 
> I wasn't part of the discussions on why things like WIPEONFORK were invented
> instead of just using signalling mechanisms, but the main reason I can think
> of are libraries.

Well, I would argue that WIPEONFORK is conceptually different. It is
one time initialization mechanism with a very clear life time semantic.
So any programming model is really as easy as, the initial state is
always 0 for a new task without any surprises later on because you own
the memory (essentially an extension to initialized .data section on
exec to any new task).

Compare that to a completely async nature of this interface. Any read
would essentially have to be properly synchronized with the external
event otherwise the state could have been corrupted. Such a consistency
model is really cumbersome to work with.

> As a library, you are under no control of the main loop usually, which means
> you just don't have a way to poll for an fd. As a library author, I would
> usually try to avoid very hard to create such a dependency, because it makes
> it really hard to glue pieces together.
> 
> The same applies to signals btw, which would also be a possible way to
> propagate such events.

Just to clarify I didn't really mean posix signals here. Those would be
quite clumsy indeed. But I can imagine that a library registers to a
system wide means to get a notification. There are many examples for
that, including a lot of usage inside libraries. All different *bus
interfaces.

-- 
Michal Hocko
SUSE Labs



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