On Fri, 2017-12-08 at 09:01 -0800, Deepa Dinamani wrote:
On Fri, Dec 8, 2017 at 8:53 AM, Ben Hutchings
ben.hutchings@codethink.co.uk wrote: On Fri, 2017-11-10 at 14:42 -0800, Deepa Dinamani wrote:
From: Arnd Bergmann arnd@arndb.de
There are a total of 53 system calls (aside from ioctl) that pass a time_t or derived data structure as an argument, and in order to extend time_t to 64-bit, we have to replace them with new system calls and keep providing backwards compatibility.
To avoid adding completely new and untested code for this purpose, we introduce a new CONFIG_64BIT_TIME symbol. Every architecture that supports new 64 bit time_t syscalls enables this config via ARCH_HAS_64BIT_TIME.
After this is done for all architectures, the CONFIG_64BIT_TIME symbol can be made a user-selected option, to enable users to build a kernel that only provides y2038-safe system calls by making 32 time_t syscalls conditionally included based on the above config.
I don't understand why we would want to change the semantics of CONFIG_64BIT_TIME symbol from "enable 64-bit time support" to "disable 32-bit time support".
Why not add two config symbols:
config 32BIT_TIME def_bool COMPAT || !64BIT
config 64BIT_TIME def_bool ARCH_HAS_64BIT_TIME
and then make 32BIT_TIME user-configurable later?
This was already discussed on the review and we have an updated version:
Sorry, I'll move on to reviewing that.
Ben.