On Thu, Feb 15, 2007 at 09:42:32AM -0800, Linus Torvalds ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) wrote: > > > On Thu, 15 Feb 2007, Evgeniy Polyakov wrote: > > > > Userspace_API_is_the_ever_possible_last_thing_to_ever_think_about. Period > > . // <- wrapped one > > No, I really think you're wrong. > > In many ways, the interfaces and especially data structures are *more* > important than the code. > > The code we can fix. The interfaces, on the other hand, we'll have to live > with forever. > > So complex interfaces that expose lots of implementation detail are not a > good thing, and it's _not_ the last thing you want to think about. Complex > interfaces with a lot of semantic knowledge seriously limit how you can > fix things up later. > > In contrast, simple interfaces that have clear and unambiguous semantics > and that can be explained at a conceptual level are things that you can > often implement in many different ways. So the interface isn't the bottle > neck: you may have to have a "backwards compatibility layer" for it
That's exaclt the way we should discuss it - you do ont like that interface, but Ingo proposed a way to change that via table of async syscalls - people asks, people answers - so eventually interface and (if any) other problems got resolved. > > If system is designed that with API changes it breaks - that system sucks > > wildly and should be thrown away. Syslets do not suffer from that. > > The syslet code itself looks fine. It's the user-visible part I'm not > convinced about. > > I'm just saying: how would use use this for existing programs? > > For something this machine-specific, you're not going to have any big > project written around the "async atom" code. So realistically, the kinds > of usage we'd see is likely some compile-time configuration option, where > people replace some specific sequence of code with another one. THAT is > what we should aim to make easy and flexible, I think. And that is where > interfaces really are as important as code. > > We know one interface: the current aio_read() one. Nobody really _likes_ > it (even database people would apparently like to extend it), but it has > the huge advantage of "being there", and having real programs that really > care that use it today. > > Others? We don't know yet. And exposing complex interfaces that may not be > the right ones is much *worse* than exposing simple interfaces (that > _also_ may not be the right ones, of course - but simple and > straightforward interfaces with obvious and not-very-complex semantics are > a lot easier to write compatibility layers for if the internal code > changes radically) So we just need to describe the way we want to see new interface - that's it. Here is a stub for async_stat() - probably broken example, but that does not matter - this interface is really easy to change. static void syslet_setup(struct syslet *s, int nr, void *arg1...) { s->flags = ... s->arg[1] = arg1; .... } long glibc_async_stat(const char *path, struct stat *buf) { /* What about making syslet and/or set of atoms per thread and preallocate * them when working threads are allocated? */ struct syslet s; syslet_setup(&s, __NR_stat, path, buf, NULL, NULL, NULL, NULL); return async_submit(&s); } > Linus -- Evgeniy Polyakov - To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-kernel" in the body of a message to [EMAIL PROTECTED] More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html Please read the FAQ at http://www.tux.org/lkml/