On Thu, Nov 29, 2018 at 9:14 PM Andy Lutomirski <luto@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > On Nov 29, 2018, at 11:55 AM, Christian Brauner <christian@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > >> On Thu, Nov 29, 2018 at 11:22:58AM -0800, Andy Lutomirski wrote: > >>> On Thu, Nov 29, 2018 at 11:17 AM Christian Brauner <christian@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > >>>> On November 30, 2018 5:54:18 AM GMT+13:00, Andy Lutomirski <luto@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > >> > >> The #1 fix would add a copy_siginfo_from_user64() or similar. > > > > Thanks very much! That all helped a bunch already! I'll try to go the > > copy_siginfo_from_user64() way first and see if I can make this work. If > > we do this I would however only want to use it for the new syscall first > > and not change all other signal syscalls over to it too. I'd rather keep > > this patchset focussed and small and do such conversions caused by the > > new approach later. Does that sound reasonable? > > Absolutely. I don’t think we can change old syscalls — the ABI is set in stone. > But for new syscalls, I think the always-64-bit behavior makes sense. It looks like we already have a 'struct signalfd_siginfo' that is defined in a sane architecture-independent way, so I'd suggest we use that. We may then also want to make sure that any system call that takes a siginfo has a replacement that takes a signalfd_siginfo, and that this replacement can be used to implement the old version purely in user space. Is the current procfd_signal() proposal (under whichever name) sufficient to correctly implement both sys_rt_sigqueueinfo() and sys_rt_tgsigqueueinfo()? Can we implement sys_rt_sigtimedwait() based on signalfd()? If yes, that would leave waitid(), which already needs a replacement for y2038, and that should then also return a signalfd_siginfo. My current preference for waitid() would be to do a version that closely resembles the current interface, but takes a signalfd_siginfo and a __kernel_timespec based rusage replacement (possibly two of them to let us map wait6), but does not operate on procfd or take a signal mask. That would require yet another syscall, but I don't think I can do that before we want to have the set of y2038 safe syscalls. Arnd