On Apr 6, 2005, at 11:11 PM, Kyle Moffett wrote:
On Apr 06, 2005, at 07:41, Renate Meijer wrote:
On Apr 6, 2005, at 12:11 AM, Kyle Moffett wrote:
Please don't remove Linux-Kernel from the CC, I think this is an
important discussion.
GAAH!!! Read my lips!!! Quit removing Linux-Kernel from the CC!!!
As I see it, there are a number of issues
- Use of double underscores invades compiler namespace (except in
those cases
where kernel definitions end up as the basis for definitions in
/usr/include/*, i.e.
those that actually are part of the C-implementation for Linux.
It is these that I'm talking about. This is exactly my point (The
cases where
the kernel definitions are part of /usr/include).
Yes. And my point was all the other occurences. Specifically those in
*.c files. Btw. Not everything in the /usr/include/* path is part of
the compiler. For instance, the network definitions are *not* part, nor
are the syscall interface or any filesystem code.
- Some type that does not conflict with compiler namespace to replace
the variety
of definitions for e.g. 32-bit unsigned integers we have now.
As I said, I don't care about this, so do whatever you want.
Ok. But you are just one developer (as much as I respect that).
- Removal of anything prefixed with a double underscore from
non-C-implementation
files.
ATM, much of the stuff in include/linux and include/asm-* is considered
"C-implementation" because it is used from userspace. If you want to
clean
that up and start moving abi files to include/kernel-abi or somesuch,
feel
free, but that's a lot of work
Agreed, and i'll probably won't have much time for that the coming five
weeks. So don't hold
your breath. However, it would be a good thing if someone (or
preferably, more than one) would
endeavour to do this.
Personally, I don't care what you feel like requiring for purely
in-kernel interfaces, but __{s,u}{8,16,32,64} must stay to avoid
namespace collisions with glibc in the kernel include files as used
by userspace.
Aye, but as I have pointed out several times, these types should be
restricted
to those files and *only* those files which eventually end up in the
compilers
includes. In every other place, they invite exactly the trouble they
are intended
to avoid.
Precisely.
So if you want to make the millions of patches, go right ahead, be my
guest. :-P
Well... Someone's got to do it, and "millions" seems to be a bit
exaggerated...
Until somebody steps forward to clean up the huge mess, nothing will
get done.
I think it's worth the efforts of more than just a single individual.
Especially since you
seem to agree the current situation isn't exactly ideal.
So in every place exept those files which may actually cause a
namespace conflict or
a bug because some newer version does not support __foobar, or
changed the
semantics. Since using any __foobar type implies relying on the
compiler internals,
which may change without prior notice, it is ipso facto undesirable.
Except the kernel wants to be optimized and work and use what features
are available.
The kernel uses __foobar stuff provided by the compiler because it has
gccX.h files
specifically designed to take compiler interfaces, provide backups
when they don't
exist, and use them (and their better checking) when they do.
I've checked those files, but the use of compiler specific tricks seems
a bit more widespread
than that.
This is kinda arguing semantics, but:
A particular set of software (linux+libc+gcc), running in a
particular
translation environment (userspace) under particular control options
(Signals, nice values, etc), that performs translation of programs
for
(emulating missing instructions), and supports execution of functions
(syscalls) in, a particular execution environment (also userspace).
Ok. And where exactly are linux and libc when compiling code for an
Atmel ATmega32 (40 pin DIL) using gcc?
Where do you get Atmel ATmega32 from?
My local electronics shop. I brought it up just to make the point the
kernel is *not* part of the compilers implementation, since the
compiler will work happily without it.
I _only_ care about what symbols Linux can use,
Ok. However, the gcc-crowd may see that in a completely different
perspective. For them the linux kernel is just one application and
linux (as a platform) just one platform they support.
and as I've mentioned, when running under *Linux*, then it just so
happens that *Linux* is part of my implementation, therefore the
*Linux* sources,
which by definition aren't used elsewhere, can assume they are part of
said
implementation.
As i've said, I don't care what you are running, OS is *never* part of
the compiler. At most some interfaces
are in a fuzzy, roundabout way. And even that is a questionable
practice.
The 'set of software' does
*not* include any OS. Not Windows, not Linux, not MacOSX, since the
whole thing might be directed at a lowly microcontroller, which DOES
NOT HAVE ANY OPERATING SYSTEM WHATSOEVER.
Nevertheless, gcc works fine.
This is unrelated and off topic.
Just to make the bloody point GCC is not dependent on Linux in any way
and hence the kernel is *not* part of GCC.
Heck, you've even consented above that
Linux can use
Without the kernel userspace wouldn't have anything, because anything
syscall-related (which is basically everything) involves the kernel.
Sure. The same goes for every other program. However, it would be
pretty
stoopid to say the kernel is an integral part of (say) the Gimp .
More so, since
the Gimp and GCC run on completely different architectures aswell.
By the same token, linux is part of XFree86 despite the fact XFree86
does not
require linux to run.
But an XFree86 binary compiled on FreeBSD, or a GIMP binary compiled
on FreeBSD,
for the most part, will not run on Linux, because the compiler uses
the _Linux_
environment to build the binary, including the _Linux_ headers and
such.
No... A binary compiled for one platform will not run on another,
usually. This still does not imply the linux kernel is part of gcc.
The built binary is nearly useless without Linux, but not vice-versa,
hence even
though the binary is not a derivative work of linux, it requires it to
run.
Weird. How come i'm running XFree86 and the Gimp on MacOSX? There ain't
no linux in sight.
Heck, the kernel and its ABI is _more_ a part of the implementation
than glibc is! I can write an assembly program that doesn't link to
or use libc, but without using syscalls I can do nothing whatsoever.
I can write entire applications using gcc without even thinking of
using
any 'syscall' or any other part of linux/bsd/whatever. Still... it's
gcc.
Uhh, what exactly is your application going to do?
Monitoring water levels and sending out alarm messages (by SMS) when
the level either
gets too low or too high. Furthermore it controls a "stuw", a device
for regulating
the waterlevel for which I do not know the english term.
So it wants to access memory, it faults to the kernel and gets stuff
paged in.
What kernel? What pages? What OS? There is no OS, just a set of library
functions
i developed (pretty much) myself.
It wants to access
a file, it does a syscall.
What files? I write to EEPROM directly. There is no filesystem. Hell
there isn't even a vfprintf. In case you are wondering, it's an
application for the Atmel ATMega I mentioned.
If it wants to allocate more memory, it calls
into the kernel.
Allocate MORE MEMORY? The 4 kb available is full enough as it is.
This is all platform specific, and part of the implementation.
And for that reason, not part of the implementation. The library (glibc
in your case) handles (or rather, should handle) the trickery involved.
But glibc isn't part of gcc.
<Wishful Thinking>
It would be nice if Linux became totally independent of any compiler,
or at least that
coupling between them would be minimal and that the amount of
assembly needed
would be minimal.
If you feel like fixing the compiler to provide good enough
interfaces, or fixing the
kernel to abstract all of that out, then fine, but remember that the
kernel has to
deal _directly_ with the hardware and is generally dependent on direct
MMU twiddling,
which _can't_ be done from C :-P.
Agreed. That why i said "minimal" instead of "absent". Personally I
think the compilers interfaces are pretty good.
It would be nice if linux defined and documented its own platform
specific types
somewhere in the arch directory, using a consistent (across
platforms) naming scheme
and used those types consistently throughout the kernel,
drivers,daemons and other
associated code.
Got a patch?
Not yet.
</Wishfull Thinking>
<Nightmare>
Your scenario above. Never-ending streams of compatibility issues and
gcc drifting
further and further from the ISO-C standard and more and more
developers depending
on non-standard interfaces, linux growing ever more dependent on
support fro features
ABC and XYZ being implemented consistently cross platform, so that if
I want to use
gcc to compile for an AVR, i'm stuck with a shitload of linux issues,
kept "for backward
compatibility".
</Nightmare>
Linux has a bunch of gcc headers that configure it based on the
compiler version.
Change the compiler and we'll add another header, which, though messy,
provides
us some safety. It would be _nice_ however, if the compiler had a
gcc/types.h file
that just provided it all for us, so we don't need to hardcode it all
based on
the architecture specified. Directly defined __gcc_u32 types (Or
whatever the GCC
people like) would be even better.
Why?
Nope. The syscall interface is employed by the library, no more,
no less. The C standard does not include *any* platform specific
stuff.
Which is why it reserves __ for use by the implementation so it can
play wherever it wants.
The C-implementation,. which still does not include the kernel. At
most
a few header files, which are used as a basis for standard types by
the C
implementation, but no more. Any double underscore in a .c file is a
blatant
error. Most used in .h files are, too.
So how do I get <linux/fb.h> to work? There aren't "just a few",
there are
__u32, etc in _everything_ with an ioctl or syscall interface,
basically
anything with an ABI.
Fine. I assume it does. But #include <linux/fb.h> does not make the
framebuffer (nor linux, for that matter) part of the
c-implementation. From
the two files mentioned above, only stdlib.h is.
Ok, so how do I fix linux/fb.h to _not_ use __u32?
The way other libraries handle it. That ain't magic. The thing that
strikes me in the file you
mention is that both versions (__u32 *and* u32) are used in parts of
the header that are
(judging by #ifdef __KERNEL__) internal to the kernel.
This implies that merely stripping the double underscore may suffice.
After all, that is code that will never be part of the
C-Implementation.
I want it to get the correct types, I don't want it to clash with or
require the
libc types (My old sources might redefine some stdint.h names, and I
don't want it
to clash with my user-defined types.
Redefining stdint types is (for this reason) a Bad Idea.
So how do I use them in <linux/*.h>?
Either stdint.h becomes part of the kernel, which implies your
redefined versions in old source are up to some maintainance, or we
rely on the asm/types.h versions and use them consistently. In either
case, use of double underscores where none are required, is not good.
Nor is redefining stuff that's defined by gcc, or worse ISO.
Anything you like. 'kernel_' or simply 'k_' would be appropriate.
As long as you do not invade compiler namespace. It is separated
and uglyfied for a purpose.
But the _entire_ non _ namespace is reserved for anything user
programs want to do with it.
The above prefix was an alternative to using a double underscore
prefix. Using *no*
prefix, should not conflict with the compiler, excepting, of course,
the types required by
the standard.
But these are also used by c programs.
Used, yes. Defined, no. The stuff the compiler headers define *without*
double underscores is the stuff that is exported for users to use. The
stuff that *has* double underscores isn't.
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