Luis Chamberlain <mcgrof@xxxxxxxxxx> writes: > On Thu, Jul 21, 2022 at 04:16:17PM +0800, Zhang Yuchen wrote: >> A user has reported a problem that the /proc/{pid} directory >> creation timestamp is incorrect. > > The directory? A bit of history that I don't think made it to the git log is that procps uses the /proc/<pid> directory, to discover the uid and gid of the process. I have memories of Albert Cahalan reporting regressions because I had tweaked the attributes of proc in ways that I expected no one would care about and caused a regression in procps. So it is not unreasonable for people to have used proc in surprising ways. I took a quick read through procps and it looks like procps reads /proc/<pid>/stat to get the start_time of the process. Which leads us to this quality of implementation issue that the time on the inode of a proc directory is the first time that someone read the directory and observed the file. Which does not need to be anything at all related to the start time. I think except for the symlinks and files under /proc/pid/fd and /proc/pid/fdinfo there is a very good case for making all of the files /proc/pid have a creation time of equal to the creation of the process in question. Although the files under /proc/pid/task/ need to have a time equal to the creation time of the thread in question. Improving the quality of implementation requires caring enough to make that change, and right now I don't. At the same time I would say the suggested patch is a bad idea. Any application that breaks because we hard set the timestamp on a proc file or directory to the beginning of time is automatically counts as a regression. Since the entire point of the patch is to break applications that are doing things wrong, aka cause regressions I don't think the patch make sense. So I would vote for understanding what the problem user is doing. Then either proc can be improved to better support users, or we can do nothing. Except for explaining the history and how people have legitimately used implementation details of proc before, I am not really interested. But I do think we can do better. Eric