On Sat, Sep 19, 2020 at 4:24 PM Al Viro <viro@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > On Sat, Sep 19, 2020 at 03:53:40PM -0700, Andy Lutomirski wrote: > > > > It would not be a win - most of the syscalls don't give a damn > > > about 32bit vs. 64bit... > > > > Any reasonable implementation would optimize it out for syscalls that don’t care. Or it could be explicit: > > > > DEFINE_MULTIARCH_SYSCALL(...) > > 1) what would that look like? In effect, it would work like this: /* Arch-specific, but there's a generic case for sane architectures. */ enum syscall_arch { SYSCALL_NATIVE, SYSCALL_COMPAT, SYSCALL_X32, }; DEFINE_MULTIARCH_SYSCALLn(args, arch) { args are the args here, and arch is the arch. } > 2) have you counted the syscalls that do and do not need that? No. > 3) how many of those realistically *can* be unified with their > compat counterparts? [hint: ioctl(2) cannot] There would be no requirement to unify anything. The idea is that we'd get rid of all the global state flags. For ioctl, we'd have a new file_operation: long ioctl(struct file *, unsigned int, unsigned long, enum syscall_arch); I'm not saying this is easy, but I think it's possible and the result would be more obviously correct than what we have now.