On Wed, Nov 29, 2006 at 02:08:01PM +0100, S?bastien Dugu? wrote: > On Wed, 29 Nov 2006 10:51:50 +0000, Christoph Hellwig <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> > wrote: > > > I'm a little bit unhappy about the usage of the notify flag. The usage > > seems correct but very confusing: > > Well, I followed the logic from posix-timers.c, but it may be a poor > choice ;-) > > For a start, the SIGEV_* flags are quite confusing (for me at least). > SIGEV_SIGNAL is defined as 0, SIGEV_NONE as 1 and SIGEV_THREAD_ID as 4. I > would rather have seen SIGEV_NONE defined as 0 to avoid all this. > > I also wish I knew why those SIGEV_* constants were defined that way.
Ah, I missed that. It explains some of the more wierd bits. I suspect we should then use != SIGEV_NONE for the any kind of signal notification bit and == SIGEV_THREAD_ID for the case where we want to deliver to a particular thread. But this means we only get a thread reference for SIGEV_THREAD_ID here: > > > + if (notify->notify == (SIGEV_SIGNAL|SIGEV_THREAD_ID)) { > > > + /* > > > + * This reference will be dropped in really_put_req() when > > > + * we're done with the request. > > > + */ > > > + get_task_struct(target); > > > + } But even use it for SIGEV_SIGNAL without SIGEV_THREAD_ID here: > > > + if (notify->notify & SIGEV_THREAD_ID) > > > + ret = send_sigqueue(notify->signo, sigq, notify->target); > > > + else > > > + ret = send_group_sigqueue(notify->signo, sigq, notify->target); Or do I miss something? - 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/