On Thu, Jul 31, 2008 at 12:44:04PM -0700, Linus Torvalds wrote: > > > On Thu, 31 Jul 2008, Dmitry Torokhov wrote: > > > > Does it have to be papered over in the kernel though? > > Yes. It's how we have worked. Asking people to upgrade big core programs > is not reasonable. > > Think of it this way: we absolutely _want_ people to run the latest > kernel. We want it for their own sake (security etc fixes), but we want it > even more for *our* own sake (testing, fixes etc). > > And if we want to encourage people to upgrade their kernel very > aggressively (and we absolutely do!), then that means that we have to also > make sure it doesn't require them upgrading anything else. Sometimes we do need to upgrade userspace though. Can we make Documentation/Changes more prominent? Maybe have it published on kernel.org? > > > We can only guarantee one thing - ABI. And that is kept intact. But I > > literally have no idea if a kernel breaks a random program out there > > that happens to have a bug. > > There are gray areas, yes. For example, timing changes do mean that a new > kenrel can easily break a program that used to work. We cannot handle > _everyting_. > > But when the ABI in question is some very specific one, that some > important program uses (even if the "uses" is "misuses") then it really > isn't a gray area any more. > > And quite frankly, the ABI was apparently pretty bad to begin with, if > user space got an array back but didn't get to specify the size. So you > may want to say that user space was broken, but on the other hand, it's > equally arguable that the ABI was crap. It did specify the size. Something 448 more bytes than it allocated: unsigned long evbits[NBITS(KEY_MAX)]; /* Check for ABS_X, ABS_Y, ABS_PRESSURE and BTN_TOOL_FINGER */ SYSCALL(ret = ioctl(fd, EVIOCGBIT(0, KEY_MAX), evbits)); So we allocate 64 bytes on stack and then as kernel to fill it with 511 bytes worth of data. > > (Which is something you can pretty much take for granted with ioctl's, of > course. DO NOT CHANGE IOCTL'S. EVER!) > > > We have 3 options now: > > > > 1. Never change KEY_MAX and dont add any new key definitions. > > 2. Introduce a new ioctl and have all wel-behaving programs rewritten > > to support it. > > 3. Fix userspace driver (patch is available). > > You ignore the obvious choice, which is how we _usually_ do it: > > - help fix up the userspace driver regardless In progress. > > - a year down the line, maybe breakage will be a non-issue. > Around when 2.6.28 is released, right? ;) > - but at least _think_ about the fact that yes, most ioctl interfaces are > pure and utter sh*t, and the problem was probably not so much the user > space driver as the crap interface to begin with! > > and discuss whether KEY_MAX really needs to be changed that much. I > suspect that the change was done without even realizing just how painful > it was, and that if you look at the original reason for it with the > hindsight of knowing that it was painful, maybe it wasn't that critical to > do it after all? > We do need more keycodes. People are coming wioth more and more. The patch following the one in question adds about 10 new kodes for remote controls/phones. And we will get more. -- Dmitry -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-next" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html