• Arnd Bergmann's avatar
    y2038: Introduce struct __kernel_old_timeval · a84d1169
    Arnd Bergmann authored
    Dealing with 'struct timeval' users in the y2038 series is a bit tricky:
    
    We have two definitions of timeval that are visible to user space,
    one comes from glibc (or some other C library), the other comes from
    linux/time.h. The kernel copy is what we want to be used for a number of
    structures defined by the kernel itself, e.g. elf_prstatus (used it core
    dumps), sysinfo and rusage (used in system calls).  These generally tend
    to be used for passing time intervals rather than absolute (epoch-based)
    times, so they do not suffer from the y2038 overflow. Some of them
    could be changed to use 64-bit timestamps by creating new system calls,
    others like the core files cannot easily be changed.
    
    An application using these interfaces likely also uses gettimeofday()
    or other interfaces that use absolute times, and pass 'struct timeval'
    pointers directly into kernel interfaces, so glibc must redefine their
    timeval based on a 64-bit time_t when they introduce their y2038-safe
    interfaces.
    
    The only reasonable way forward I see is to remove the 'timeval'
    definion from the kernel's uapi headers, and change the interfaces that
    we do not want to (or cannot) duplicate for 64-bit times to use a new
    __kernel_old_timeval definition instead. This type should be avoided
    for all new interfaces (those can use 64-bit nanoseconds, or the 64-bit
    version of timespec instead), and should be used with great care when
    converting existing interfaces from timeval, to be sure they don't suffer
    from the y2038 overflow, and only with consensus for the particular user
    that using __kernel_old_timeval is better than moving to a 64-bit based
    interface. The structure name is intentionally chosen to not conflict
    with user space types, and to be ugly enough to discourage its use.
    
    Note that ioctl based interfaces that pass a bare 'timeval' pointer
    cannot change to '__kernel_old_timeval' because the user space source
    code refers to 'timeval' instead, and we don't want to modify the user
    space sources if possible. However, any application that relies on a
    structure to contain an embedded 'timeval' (e.g. by passing a pointer
    to the member into a function call that expects a timeval pointer) is
    broken when that structure gets converted to __kernel_old_timeval. I
    don't see any way around that, and we have to rely on the compiler to
    produce a warning or compile failure that will alert users when they
    recompile their sources against a new libc.
    Signed-off-by: default avatarArnd Bergmann <arnd@arndb.de>
    Signed-off-by: default avatarThomas Gleixner <tglx@linutronix.de>
    Cc: Stephen Boyd <sboyd@kernel.org>
    Cc: John Stultz <john.stultz@linaro.org>
    Cc: Al Viro <viro@zeniv.linux.org.uk>
    Link: https://lkml.kernel.org/r/20180315161739.576085-1-arnd@arndb.de
    a84d1169
time.c 22.5 KB