* Andi Kleen ([email protected]) wrote:
> On Fri, Sep 07, 2007 at 08:46:48AM -0400, Mathieu Desnoyers wrote:
> > * Andi Kleen ([email protected]) wrote:
> > > > +config IMMEDIATE
> > > > + default y if !DISABLE_IMMEDIATE
> > >
> > > It's still unclear to me why DISABLE_IMMEDIATE is needed. It would
> > > be better to make it just the default.
> > >
> >
> > It is actually the default on any non embedded configuration. Do you
> > think we should make it default to on on embedded configs too ?
>
> I would prefer to not have any config options at all and let
> the non converted architectures always use a asm-generic fallback.
>
> > The idea here is to give embedded system developers incentives to
> > create an optimized immediate value header for their architecture. I
>
> Sounds like a quite bogus way to do this.
>
> > fear that if it is not trivial to disable when they need to use ROM to
> > put the kernel code (as kprobes is, meaning, with a single config
> > option), they will refuse to event think about including an optimized
> > immediate value header for their architecture.
>
> #ifdef CONFIG_ARCH_SPECIFIC_READONLY
> #include <asm-generic/generic-immediate.h>
> #else
> /* optimized implementation */
> #endif
>
> That's trivial.
>
Yeah, but then you would make immediate.o an obj-y (both for
kernel/Makefile and arch/*/kernel/Makefile) and it would be built
even on systems that would be configured not to use immediate values.
Therefore, it would compile-in unused code if we do as you propose,
which I am reluctant to do on embedded systems where code size matters.
Mathieu
> > And yes, having a CONFIG_READ_ONLY_TEXT makes sense, but it implies
> > menu dependencies with not only immediate values but also kprobes,
> > paravirt, alternatives, (am I missing others ?)
>
> paravirt and alternatives are x86 only.
>
> I don't think CONFIG_READ_ONLY_TEXT on x86 makes sense.
>
> On other architectures they have to deal with kprobes, but they
> presumably do this already. Not really your problem I suspect.
>
>
> > As long as we find a way for people to disable _all_ code patching in
> > their kernel, I'm happy with that. But since every existing code
> > patching mechanism can currently be disabled one by one, it makes sense
> > to do the same for the immediate values. Having a global
> > CONFIG_READ_ONLY_TEXT should IMHO come in a separate effort.
>
> You're clearly deep into overdesign territory here.
>
> -Andi
--
Mathieu Desnoyers
Computer Engineering Ph.D. Student, Ecole Polytechnique de Montreal
OpenPGP key fingerprint: 8CD5 52C3 8E3C 4140 715F BA06 3F25 A8FE 3BAE 9A68
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