On Mon, Sep 30, 2024 at 11:39:49AM GMT, Lorenzo Stoakes wrote: > On Mon, Sep 30, 2024 at 12:33:18PM GMT, Florian Weimer wrote: > > * Lorenzo Stoakes: > > > > > If you wish to utilise a pidfd interface to refer to the current process > > > (from the point of view of userland - from the kernel point of view - the > > > thread group leader), it is rather cumbersome, requiring something like: > > > > > > int pidfd = pidfd_open(getpid(), 0); > > > > > > ... > > > > > > close(pidfd); > > > > > > Or the equivalent call opening /proc/self. It is more convenient to use a > > > sentinel value to indicate to an interface that accepts a pidfd that we > > > simply wish to refer to the current process. > > > > The descriptor will refer to the current thread, not process, right? > > No it refers to the current process (i.e. thread group leader from kernel > perspective). Unless you specify PIDFD_THREAD, this is the same if you did the above. > > > > > The distinction matters for pidfd_getfd if a process contains multiple > > threads with different file descriptor tables, and probably for > > pidfd_send_signal as well. > > You mean if you did a strange set of flags to clone()? Otherwise these are > shared right? > > Again, we are explicitly looking at process not thread from userland > perspective. A PIDFD_SELF_THREAD might be possible, but this series doesn't try > to implement that. Florian raises a good point. Currently we have: (1) int pidfd_tgid = pidfd_open(getpid(), 0); (2) int pidfd_thread = pidfd_open(getpid(), PIDFD_THREAD); and this instructs: pidfd_send_signal() pidfd_getfd() to do different things. For pidfd_send_signal() it's whether the operation has thread-group scope or thread-scope for pidfd_send_signal() and for pidfd_getfd() it determines the fdtable to use. The thing is that if you pass: pidfd_getfd(PDIFD_SELF) and you have: TGID T1 { clone(CLONE_THREAD) unshare(CLONE_FILES) } T2 { clone(CLONE_THREAD) unshare(CLONE_FILES) } You have 3 threads in the same thread-group that all have distinct file descriptor tables from each other. So if T1 did: pidfd_getfd(PIDFD_SELF, ...) and we mirror the PIDTYPE_TGID behavior then T1 will very likely expect to get the fd from its file descriptor table. IOW, its reasonable to expect that T1 is interested in their very own resource, not someone else's even if it is the thread-group leader. But what T1 will get in reality is an fd from TGID's file descriptor table (and similar for T2). Iirc, yes that confusion exists already with /proc/self. But the question is whether we should add the same confusion to the pidfd api or whether we make PIDFD_SELF actually mean PIDTYPE_PID aka the actual calling thread. My thinking is that if you have the reasonable suspicion that you're multi-threaded and that you're interested in the thread-group resource then you should be using: int pidfd = pidfd_open(getpid(), 0) and hand that thread-group leader pidfd around since you're interested in another thread. But if you're really just interested in your own resource then pidfd_open(getpid(), 0) makes no sense and you would want PIDFD_SELF. Thoughts?