On Mon, May 27, 2019 at 12:45 PM Christian Brauner <christian@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > On Mon, May 27, 2019 at 12:02:37PM +0200, Arnd Bergmann wrote: > > On Sun, May 26, 2019 at 12:27 PM Christian Brauner <christian@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > > > > > Wire up the clone6() call on x86. > > > > > > This patch only wires up clone6() on x86. Some of the arches look like they > > > need special assembly massaging and it is probably smarter if the > > > appropriate arch maintainers would do the actual wiring. > > > > Why do some architectures need special cases here? I'd prefer to have > > new system calls always get defined in a way that avoids this, and > > have a common entry point for everyone. > > > > Looking at the m68k sys_clone comment in > > arch/m68k/kernel/process.c, it seems that this was done as an > > optimization to deal with an inferior ABI. Similar code is present > > in h8300, ia64, nios2, and sparc. If all of them just do this to > > shave off a few cycles from the system call entry, I really > > couldn't care less. > > I'm happy to wire all arches up at the same time in the next revision. I > just wasn't sure why some of them were assemblying the living hell out > of clone; especially ia64. I really didn't want to bother touching all > of this just for an initial RFC. Don't worry about doing all architectures for the RFC, I mainly want this to be done consistently by the time it gets into linux-next. One thing to figure out though is whether we need the stack_size argument that a couple of architectures pass. It's usually hardwired to zero, but not all the time, and I don't know the history of this. Arnd