Hi Linus, On Tue, Jan 03, 2023 at 11:19:36AM -0800, Linus Torvalds wrote: > performed as well as they could, but on the whole this is still a > really tiny thing, and Jason is trying to micro-optimize something > that THE KERNEL SHOULD NOT CARE ABOUT. I don't think this is about micro-optimization. Rather, userspace RNGs aren't really possible in a safe way at the moment. This patchset aims to make that possible, by providing things that libc will use. The cover letter of this series makes that case. > This should all be in libc. Not in the kernel with special magic vdso > support and special buffer allocations. The kernel should give good > enough support that libc can do a good job, but the kernel should > simply *not* take the approach of "libc will get this wrong, so let's > just do all the work for it". That's not what this patchset does. libc still needs to handle per-thread semantics itself and slice up buffers and so forth. The vDSO doesn't allocate any memory. I suspect this was Ingo's presumption too, and you extrapolated from that. But that's not what's happening. > Now, if the magic buffers were something cool that were a generic > concept that a lot of *other* cases would also kill for, that's one Actually, I was thinking VM_DROPPABLE might be a somewhat interesting thing to introduce for database caches and so forth, where dropping things under memory pressure is actually useful. Obviously that's the result of a thought process involving a solution looking for a problem, but I considered this a month or so ago when I first sent this in, and decided that if I was to expose this via a MAP_* flag in mmap(), that should come later, so I didn't here. Anyway, that is all to say it's not like this is the only use for it. But either way, I don't actually have my sights set on it as a general solution -- after all, I am not in the process of authoring a database cache or something -- and if I can make Andy's vm_ops suggestion work, that sounds perfectly fine to me. > thing. But this is such a small special case that absolutely *nobody* > has asked for, and that nothing else wants. Okay so that's where I think you're really quite mistaken. If you recall the original discussion on this, I was initially a bit hesitant to do it and didn't really want to do it that much. And then I looked into it, and talked to a bunch of library and program authors, and saw that there's actually quite a bit of demand for this, and generally an unhealthy ecosystem of bad solutions that have cropped up in lieu of a good one. (I talked about this a bit with tglx at Plumbers, and I had hoped to discuss with you as well, but you weren't available.) Jason