On Tue, Sep 22, 2020 at 9:59 AM Pavel Begunkov <asml.silence@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: > On 22/09/2020 10:23, Arnd Bergmann wrote: > > On Tue, Sep 22, 2020 at 8:32 AM Pavel Begunkov <asml.silence@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: > >> On 22/09/2020 03:58, Andy Lutomirski wrote: > >>> On Mon, Sep 21, 2020 at 5:24 PM Pavel Begunkov <asml.silence@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: > >>> I may be looking at a different kernel than you, but aren't you > >>> preventing creating an io_uring regardless of whether SQPOLL is > >>> requested? > >> > >> I diffed a not-saved file on a sleepy head, thanks for noticing. > >> As you said, there should be an SQPOLL check. > >> > >> ... > >> if (ctx->compat && (p->flags & IORING_SETUP_SQPOLL)) > >> goto err; > > > > Wouldn't that mean that now 32-bit containers behave differently > > between compat and native execution? > > > > I think if you want to prevent 32-bit applications from using SQPOLL, > > it needs to be done the same way on both to be consistent: > > The intention was to disable only compat not native 32-bit. I'm not following why that would be considered a valid option, as that clearly breaks existing users that update from a 32-bit kernel to a 64-bit one. Taking away the features from users that are still on 32-bit kernels already seems questionable to me, but being inconsistent about it seems much worse, in particular when the regression is on the upgrade path. > > Can we expect all existing and future user space to have a sane > > fallback when IORING_SETUP_SQPOLL fails? > > SQPOLL has a few differences with non-SQPOLL modes, but it's easy > to convert between them. Anyway, SQPOLL is a privileged special > case that's here for performance/latency reasons, I don't think > there will be any non-accidental users of it. Ok, so the behavior of 32-bit tasks would be the same as running the same application as unprivileged 64-bit tasks, with applications already having to implement that fallback, right? Arnd