fup2p, this is offtopic for most lists
Arnd Bergmann dixit:
It's hard because we don't even know what ioctls are affected at this point, and I was hoping to get this part merged as a stepping stone in the process of finding out.
Oh okay.
e) ioctls that pass a time value as a 'long' or '__u32' instead of 'time_t'. Fixing them requires adding new ioctl commands to let them work beyond 2038, independent of what we do here.
Yeah, that’s going to be fun.
MIPS on the other hand is no more broken than any of the other 32-bit ABIs, because it does not use 64-bit __kernel_long_t in its n32 ABI.
I have heard from a MIPS porter that one of the flavours suffers from similar problems as x32, just not to that extent. But I don’t recall my source…
ioctls. My plan at this point is to eliminate all uses of time_t in the kernel and replace them with time64_t or other safe types. This way, we will eventually find all code that passes 32-bit time types to user space and can fix it. This will take care of the time_t related problems on x32 as well.
Ah, interesting approach. And existing userspace, as well as new userspace that does not declare 64-bit time_t readiness, is still safe on currently-not-broken architectures? So, there’s enough time to fix this before the various libcs turn that on (and it had better be fixed by then, because it becomes ABI by then). Nice idea.
I am wondering a bit about the ioctls being hard to find. I have not much experience with kernel programming, and even less with Linux than with MS-DOS and BSD, but should not each driver have a central ioctl entry point, from which it should cast the user space data into a (possibly locally declared) structure?
bye, //mirabilos