On Fri, Jan 21, 2022 at 02:46:02PM +0100, Janis Schoetterl-Glausch wrote: > >> +static inline __must_check unsigned long > >> +_copy_from_user_key(void *to, const void __user *from, unsigned long n, u8 key) > > > > Make key unsigned long, add support for INLINE_COPY_TO_USER, and maybe > > add a wrapper, so this works on all architectures, e.g. if > > raw_copy_to_user_key() is not defined, then fall back to > > raw_copy_to_user() and ignore the key parameter. > > > > Since we only need the double underscore variants, even if we're going to be more > general than we need to be, we can restrict ourselves to those, can't we? I don't think that works with INLINE_COPY_TO_USER. The reason for the single underline variants is being able to have an out-line-implementation in lib/usercopy.c, isn't it? > I don't understand your comment about the wrapper. You'd want an error on misuse, > that is, if you try to use a _with_key function if the functionality is not defined, no? No. My intention was that it should simply work/compile by default for architectures which do not support a key mechanism: something like #ifndef raw_copy_to_user_key static inline unsigned long raw_copy_to_user_key(..., unsigned long key) { return raw_copy_to_user(...); } #endif Again, this is just a proposal and might be turned down by common code guys. Just trying to come up with something which could also work on other architectures, and which does not cause pain because architectures don't really need it.