On Mon, Jul 3, 2017 at 12:23 PM, Thomas Gleixner <tglx@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > On Mon, 26 Jun 2017, Arnd Bergmann wrote: >> On Mon, Jun 26, 2017 at 8:17 PM, Deepa Dinamani <deepa.kernel@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: >> > On Sun, Jun 25, 2017 at 7:35 PM, Al Viro <viro@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: >> >> On Sat, Jun 24, 2017 at 11:45:01AM -0700, Deepa Dinamani wrote: >> >>> The series aims at isolating data conversions of time_t based structures: >> >>> struct timespec and struct itimerspec at user space boundaries. >> >>> This helps to later change the underlying types to handle y2038 changes >> >>> to these. >> >> >> >> Nice... A few questions: >> >> >> >> * what about setitimer(2)? Right now that's the only remaining user of >> >> get_compat_itimerval(); similar for getitimer(2) and put_compat_itimerval(). >> > >> > We do not plan to support these beyond y2038 on 32 bit systems. >> > timer_settime() and timer_gettime() are considered to be replacements >> > for these, respectively. >> > >> > There is also going to be a cleanup of timeval/ timespec/ time_t data >> > types and apis after the new syscalls are ready. >> > At that time I might choose to get rid of these itimerval apis. I'm >> > not sure yet. >> >> I see that internally, alarm/getitimer/setitimer all use ktime_t, so >> one possible solution would be to push down the use of ktime_t >> into the callers and do both the conversion and range check in the >> user copy function. > > We still can decide to not support the itimer API with the new y2038 ready > syscalls. > > Actually there is no real need to do so because the itimer interfaces are > relative and never absolute. Keeping relative time limited to 68 years from > now should be good enough :) I really want to have all syscalls to use 64-bit time_t for the new API, otherwise we get into the really silly state where even for future architectures, glibc has to convert the 64-bit time_t coming from an application into a 32-bit timeval to pass it to the kernel, which then converts it back to an internal type (64-bit time_t or ktime_t). In case of the itimer interfaces, this is really no question though, as Deepa said, since glibc can simply implement the new version by calling timer_create/timer_settime instead of calling the 32-bit setitimer. timer_settime() needs to take 64-bit arguments anyway because it can use either relative or absolute arguments. Arnd