Hello Florian, On 9/23/19 10:41 PM, Florian Weimer wrote: > * Michael Kerrisk: > >>>> static >>>> int pidfd_open(pid_t pid, unsigned int flags) >>>> { >>>> return syscall(__NR_pidfd_open, pid, flags); >>>> } >>> >>> Please call this function something else (not pidfd_open), so that the >>> example continues to work if glibc provides the system call wrapper. >> >> I figured that if the syscall does get added to glibc, then I would >> modify the example. In the meantime, this does seem the most natural >> way of doing things, since the example then uses the real syscall >> name as it would be used if there were a wrapper function. > > The problem is that programs do this as well, so they fail to build > once they are built on a newer glibc version. But isn't such a failure a good thing? I mean: it encourages people to rid their programs of uses of syscall(2). >> But, this leads to the question: what do you think the likelihood >> is that this system call will land in glibc? > > Quite likely. It's easy enough to document, there are no P&C issues, > and it doesn't need any new types. Okay. > pidfd_send_signal is slightly more difficult because we probably need > to add rt_sigqueueinfo first, for consistency. Okay. I see that's a little more problematic. Cheers, Michael -- Michael Kerrisk Linux man-pages maintainer; http://www.kernel.org/doc/man-pages/ Linux/UNIX System Programming Training: http://man7.org/training/