On Wed, 4 Feb 2009, Andrew Morton wrote:

> On Thu, 5 Feb 2009 12:59:07 +1300
> Michael Kerrisk <[email protected]> wrote:
> 
> > >> > > > What should be userspace's fallback strategy if that support is not
> > >> > > > present?
> > >> > >
> > >> > > #ifdef EFD_SEMAPHORE, maybe?
> > >> >
> > >> > That's compile-time.  People who ship binaries will probably want
> > >> > to find a runtime thing for back-compatibility.
> > >>
> > >> I dunno. How do they actually do when we add new flags, like the O_ ones?
> > >>
> > >
> > > Dunno.  Probably try the syscall and see if it returned -EINVAL.  Does
> > > that work in this case?
> > 
> > As youll have seen by now, Ulrich and I noted that it works.
> 
> I think you means "should work" ;)
> 
> We're talking about this, yes?
> 
> SYSCALL_DEFINE2(eventfd2, unsigned int, count, int, flags)
> {
>       int fd;
>       struct eventfd_ctx *ctx;
> 
>       /* Check the EFD_* constants for consistency.  */
>       BUILD_BUG_ON(EFD_CLOEXEC != O_CLOEXEC);
>       BUILD_BUG_ON(EFD_NONBLOCK != O_NONBLOCK);
> 
>       if (flags & ~(EFD_CLOEXEC | EFD_NONBLOCK))
>               return -EINVAL;
> 
> That looks like it should work to me.

I lost you guys. On old kernels you'd get -EINVAL when using the new flag. 
Wasn't it clear? Or is there some side-band traffic in this conversation 
that I missed? :)



- Davide


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