Historically, Linux didn't follow SUS with respect to RLIM_INFINITY signedness; it was changed during 2.4 development cycle, but in somewhat peculiar and arch-dependent fashion due to backward compatibility concerns. Signed-off-by: Eugene Syromyatnikov <evgsyr@xxxxxxxxx> --- man2/getrlimit.2 | 34 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ 1 file changed, 34 insertions(+) diff --git a/man2/getrlimit.2 b/man2/getrlimit.2 index 648fd3c..df392a5 100644 --- a/man2/getrlimit.2 +++ b/man2/getrlimit.2 @@ -646,6 +646,40 @@ The name of the glibc wrapper function is .BR prlimit (); the underlying system call is .BR prlimit64 (). +The corresponding infinity value constant is provided in +.I <linux/resource.h> +as +.BR RLIM64_INFINITY. +.PP +Linux 2.2 and earlier versions used signed types for limits; +that was changed +(along with the value of +.BR RLIM_INFINITY ) +.\" http://repo.or.cz/davej-history.git/blobdiff/129f8758d8c41e0378ace0b6e2f56bbb8a1ec694..15305d2e69c3a838bacd78962c07077d2821f255:/include/linux/resource.h +during the 2.4 development cycle, +as it was not compatible with the Single UNIX Specification. +However, in order to preserve backward compatibility, +the routine +.IR sys_old_getrlimit +was implemented for the +.B __NR_getrlimit +syscall slot, +with infinity checks being performed against a literal 0x7fffffff value, +and +.I sys_getrlimit +has been exposed under a new name, +.BR ugetrlimit (). +Most newer architectures do not have the latter, with +.BR getrlimit () +providing the conforming implementation. +However, several architectures decided not to change the +.B RLIM_INFINITY +value: 32-bit MIPS and SPARC +(but not 64-bit variants, that switched to the new value of (~0UL)) +retained the old 0x7fffffff value, +and Alpha retained 0x7ffffffffffffffful. +.\" ...along with a request to call when one runs into it: +.\" https://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/torvalds/linux.git/tree/arch/alpha/include/uapi/asm/resource.h#n15 .SH BUGS In older Linux kernels, the .B SIGXCPU -- 2.1.4