On Thu, Nov 1, 2018 at 11:52 AM Rich Felker <dalias@xxxxxxxx> wrote: > > There's no need to chain if the handler is specific to the context > where the fault happens. You just replace the handler with the one > relevant to the code you're about to run before you run it. That's much too expensive to do as a system call. Maybe an rseq-like "register an area where exception information will be found" and then you can just swap in a pointer there (and nest with previous pointers). But even that doesn't work. Maybe some library wants to capture page faults because they write-protected some area and want to log writes and then emulate them (or just enable them after logging - statistical logging is a thing). And then another library (or just nested code) wants to handle the eenter fault, so it overwrites the page handler fault. What do you do if you now get a page fault before you even do the eenter? The whole "one global error handler" model is broken. It's broken even if the "global" one is just per-thread. Don't do it. Even signals didn't make *that* bad a mistake, and signals are horrible. Linus