On Sun, Sep 20, 2020 at 9:28 PM Andy Lutomirski <l...@kernel.org> wrote:
> On Sun, Sep 20, 2020 at 12:23 PM Matthew Wilcox <wi...@infradead.org> wrote:
> >
> > On Sun, Sep 20, 2020 at 08:10:31PM +0100, Al Viro wrote:
> > > IMO it's much saner to mark those and refuse to touch them from 
> > > io_uring...
> >
> > Simpler solution is to remove io_uring from the 32-bit syscall list.
> > If you're a 32-bit process, you don't get to use io_uring.  Would
> > any real users actually care about that?
>
> We could go one step farther and declare that we're done adding *any*
> new compat syscalls :)

Would you also stop adding system calls to native 32-bit systems then?

On memory constrained systems (less than 2GB a.t.m.), there is still a
strong demand for running 32-bit user space, but all of the recent Arm
cores (after Cortex-A55) dropped the ability to run 32-bit kernels, so
that compat mode may eventually become the primary way to run
Linux on cheap embedded systems.

I don't think there is any chance we can realistically take away io_uring
from the 32-bit ABI any more now.

      Arnd

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