On Tue, Dec 19, 2023 at 2:23 AM Christian Brauner <brauner@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > On Mon, Dec 18, 2023 at 05:11:23PM -0800, Linus Torvalds wrote: > > On Mon, 18 Dec 2023 at 16:05, Alexei Starovoitov > > <alexei.starovoitov@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > > > > > 2) Introduce BPF token object, from Andrii Nakryiko. > > > > I assume this is why I and some other unusual recipients are cc'd, > > because the networking people feel like they can't judge this and > > shouldn't merge non-networking code like this. > > > > Honestly, I was told - and expected - that this part would come in a > > branch of its own, so that it would be sanely reviewable. > > > > Now it's mixed in with everything else. > > > > This is *literally* why we have branches in git, so that people can > > make more independent changes and judgements, and so that we don't > > have to be in a situation where "look, here's ten different things, > > pull it all or nothing". > > > > Many of the changes *look* like they are in branches, but they've been > > the "fake branches" that are just done as "patch series in a branch, > > with the cover letter as the merge message". > > > > Which is great for maintaining that cover letter information and a > > certain amount of historical clarity, but not helpful AT ALL for the > > "independent changes" thing when it is all mixed up in history, where > > independent things are mostly serialized and not actually independent > > in history at all. > > > > So now it appears to be one big mess, and exactly that "all or > > nothing" thing that isn't great, since the whole point was that the > > networking people weren't comfortable with the reviewing filesystem > > side. > > > > And honestly, the bpf side *still* seems to be absolutely conbfused > > and complkete crap when it comes to file descriptors. > > > > I took a quick look, and I *still* see new code being introduced there > > that thinks that file descriptor zero is special, and we tols you a > > *year* ago that that wasn't true, and that you need to fix this. > > > > I literally see complete garbage like tghis: > > > > .. > > __u32 btf_token_fd; > > ... > > if (attr->btf_token_fd) { > > token = bpf_token_get_from_fd(attr->btf_token_fd); > > > > and this is all *new* code that makes that same bogus sh*t-for-brains > > mistake that was wrong the first time. > > > > So now I'm saying NAK. Enough is enough. No more of this crazy "I > > don't understand even the _basics_ of file descriptors, and yet I'm > > introducing new random interfaces". > > > > I know you thought fd zero was something invalid. You were told > > otherwise. Apparently you just ignored being wrong, and have decided > > to double down on being wrong. > > > > We don't take this kind of flat-Earther crap. > > > > File descriptors don't start at 1. Deal with reality. Stop making the > > same mistake over and over. If you ant to have a "no file descriptor" > > flag, you use a signed type, and a signed value for that, because file > > descriptor zero is perfectly valid, and I don't want to hear any more > > uninformed denialism. > > > > Stop polluting the kernel with incorrect assumptions. > > > > So yes, I will keep NAK'ing this until this kind of fundamental > > mistake is fixed. This is not rocket science, and this is not > > something that wasn't discussed before. Your ignorance has now turned > > from "I didn't know" to "I didn 't care", and at that point I really > > don't want to see new code any more. > > Alexei, Andrii, this is a massive breach of trust and flatout > disrespectful. I barely reword mails and believe me I've reworded this > mail many times. I'm furious. > > Over the last couple of months since LSFMM in May 2023 until almost last > week I've given you extensive design and review for this whole approach > to get this into even remotely sane shape from a VFS perspective. > > The VFS maintainers including Linus have explicitly NAKed this "zero is > not a valid fd nonsense" and told you to stop doing that. We told you > that such fundamental VFS semantics are not yours to decide. > > And yet you put a patch into a series that did exactly that and then had > the unbelievable audacity to repeatedly ask me to put my ACK under this > - both in person and on list. > > I'm glad I only gave my ACK to the two patches that I extensivly > reviewed and never to the whole series. fwiw to three patches: https://lore.kernel.org/bpf/20231208-besessen-vibrieren-4e963e3ca3ba@brauner/ which are all the main bits of it. The patch 4 that does: if (attr->map_token_fd) wasn't sneaked in in any way. You were cc-ed on it just like linux-fsdevel@vger during all 12 revisions of the token series over many months. So this accusation of breach of trust is baseless. Indeed we didn't internalize that you guys hate fd=0 so much. In the past you made it clear fd=0 shouldn't be an alias to AT_FDCWD. We got that part. Meaning of fd=0 here wasn't a special new thing. We made this mistake in the past and assumed it's ok-ish to continue in similar situations. As I said. Point taken. We'll use flag+fd approach as Linus suggested.