On Sat, Aug 5, 2017 at 6:12 AM, Deepa Dinamani deepa.kernel@gmail.com wrote:
struct timespec is not y2038 safe. Use y2038 safe struct timespec64 to represent timeouts. The system call interface itself will be changed as part of different series.
Timeouts will not really need more than 32 bits. But, replacing these with timespec64 helps verification of a y2038 safe kernel by getting rid of timespec internally.
Signed-off-by: Deepa Dinamani deepa.kernel@gmail.com Cc: linux-aio@kvack.org
Nice cleanup of the compat path!
static long read_events(struct kioctx *ctx, long min_nr, long nr, struct io_event __user *event,
struct timespec __user *timeout)
ktime_t until)
{
ktime_t until = KTIME_MAX; long ret = 0;
if (timeout) {
struct timespec ts;
if (unlikely(copy_from_user(&ts, timeout, sizeof(ts))))
return -EFAULT;
until = timespec_to_ktime(ts);
}
/* * Note that aio_read_events() is being called as the conditional - i.e. * we're calling it after prepare_to_wait() has set task state to
@@ -1824,6 +1814,25 @@ SYSCALL_DEFINE3(io_cancel, aio_context_t, ctx_id, struct iocb __user *, iocb, return ret; }
+static long do_io_getevents(aio_context_t ctx_id,
long min_nr,
long nr,
struct io_event __user *events,
struct timespec64 *ts)
+{
ktime_t until = ts ? timespec64_to_ktime(*ts) : KTIME_MAX;
struct kioctx *ioctx = lookup_ioctx(ctx_id);
long ret = -EINVAL;
if (likely(ioctx)) {
if (likely(min_nr <= nr && min_nr >= 0))
ret = read_events(ioctx, min_nr, nr, events, until);
percpu_ref_put(&ioctx->users);
}
return ret;
+}
I guess these two functions are small enough that they could be merged into one, saving a few lines. Then again, fs/aio.c seems to generally use fairly short functions doing not too much at once, so your approach maybe fits better with the style of the subsystem.
Either way,
Reviewed-by: Arnd Bergmann arnd@arndb.de
Arnd