On Wed, 28 Feb 2007, Ingo Molnar wrote: > > * Davide Libenzi <davidel@xmailserver.org> wrote: > > > My point is, the syslet infrastructure is expensive for the kernel in > > terms of compat, [...] > > it is not. Today i've implemented 64-bit syslets on x86_64 and > 32-bit-on-64-bit compat syslets. Both the 64-bit and the 32-bit syslet > (and threadlet) binaries work just fine on a 64-bit kernel, and they > share 99% of the infrastructure. There's only a single #ifdef > CONFIG_COMPAT in kernel/async.c: > > #ifdef CONFIG_COMPAT > > asmlinkage struct syslet_uatom __user * > compat_sys_async_exec(struct syslet_uatom __user *uatom, > struct async_head_user __user *ahu) > { > return __sys_async_exec(uatom, ahu, &compat_sys_call_table, > compat_NR_syscalls); > } > > #endif
Did you hide all the complexity of the userspace atom decoding inside another function? :) How much code would go away, in case we pick a simple/parallel sys_async_exec engine? Atoms decoding, special userspace variable access for loops, jumps/cond/... VM engine. > Even mixed-mode syslets should work (although i havent specifically > tested them), where the head switches between 64-bit and 32-bit mode and > submits syslets from both 64-bit and from 32-bit mode, and at the same > time there might be both 64-bit and 32-bit syslets 'in flight'. > > But i'm happy to change the syslet API in any sane way, and did so based > on feedback from Jens who is actually using them. Wouldn't you agree on a simple/parallel execution engine like me and Linus are proposing (and threadlets, of course)? - Davide - 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/