On Tue, Nov 23, 2021 at 10:14 AM Cyril Hrubis <chrubis@xxxxxxx> wrote: > > I don't think this is correct on all 64-bit architectures, as far as I > > remember the > > definition can use either 'long' or 'long long' depending on the user space > > toolchain. > > As far as I can tell the userspace bits/types.h does exactly the same > check in order to define uint64_t and int64_t, i.e.: > > #if __WORDSIZE == 64 > typedef signed long int __int64_t; > typedef unsigned long int __uint64_t; > #else > __extension__ typedef signed long long int __int64_t; > __extension__ typedef unsigned long long int __uint64_t; > #endif > > The macro __WORDSIZE is defined per architecture, and it looks like the > defintions in glibc sources in bits/wordsize.h match the uapi > asm/bitsperlong.h. But I may have missed something, the code in glibc is > not exactly easy to read. It's possible that the only difference between the two files was the '__u32'/'__s32' definition, which could be either 'int' or 'long'. We used to try matching the user space types for these, but not use 'int' everywhere in the kernel. > > Out of the ten supported 64-bit architectures, there are four that already > > use asm-generic/int-l64.h conditionally, and six that don't, and I > > think at least > > some of those are intentional. > > > > I think it would be safer to do this one architecture at a time to make > > sure this doesn't regress on those that require the int-ll64.h version. > > I'm still trying to understand what exactly can go wrong here. As long > as __BITS_PER_LONG is correctly defined the __u64 and __s64 will be > correctly sized as well. The only visible change is that one 'long' is > dropped from the type when it's not needed. Correct, I'm not worried about getting incorrectly-sized types here, but using the wrong type can cause compile-time warnings when they are mismatched against format strings or assigning pointers to the wrong types. With the kernel types, one would always use %d for __u32 and %lld for __u64, while with the user space types, one has to resort to using macros. Arnd