在 2026/6/22 19:27, David Hildenbrand (Arm) 写道:
> On 6/22/26 07:28, Alexei Starovoitov wrote:
>> On Sun, Jun 21, 2026 at 9:06 PM Kaitao Cheng <[email protected]> wrote:
>>>
>>> From: chengkaitao <[email protected]>
>>>
>>> The list_for_each*_safe() helpers are used when the loop body may remove
>>> the current entry. Their current interface, however, forces every caller
>>> to define a temporary cursor outside the macro and pass it in, even when
>>> the caller never uses that cursor directly. For most call sites this
>>> extra cursor is just boilerplate required by the macro implementation.
>>>
>>> This is awkward because the saved next pointer is an internal detail of
>>> the iteration. Callers that only remove or move the current entry do not
>>> need to spell it out.
>>>
>>> The _safe() suffix has also caused confusion. Christian Koenig pointed
>>> out that the name is easy to read as a thread-safe variant, especially
>>> for beginners, even though it only means that the iterator keeps enough
>>> state to tolerate removal of the current entry. He suggested _mutable()
>>> as a clearer description of what the loop permits.
>>>
>>> Add *_mutable() iterator variants for list, hlist and llist. The new
>>> helpers are variadic and support both forms. In the common case, the
>>> caller omits the temporary cursor and the macro creates a unique internal
>>> cursor with typeof(pos) and __UNIQUE_ID(). If a loop really needs an
>>> explicit temporary cursor, the caller can still pass it and the helper
>>> keeps the existing *_safe() behaviour.
>>>
>>> For example, a call site may use the shorter form:
>>>
>>> list_for_each_entry_mutable(pos, head, member)
>>>
>>> or keep the explicit temporary cursor form:
>>>
>>> list_for_each_entry_mutable(pos, tmp, head, member)
>>>
>>> The existing *_safe() helpers remain available for compatibility. This
>>> series only converts users in mm, block, kernel, init and io_uring. If
>>> this approach looks acceptable, the remaining users can be converted in
>>> follow-up series.
>>>
>>> Changes in v3 (Christian König, Andy Shevchenko):
>>> - Convert safe list walks to mutable iterators
>>>
>>> Changes in v2 (Muchun Song, Andy Shevchenko):
>>> - Drop the list_for_each_entry_mutable*() helpers from v1 and make the
>>> cursor change directly in the existing list_for_each_entry*() helpers.
>>> - Open-code special list walks that rely on updating the loop cursor in
>>> the body, preserving their existing traversal semantics.
>>>
>>> Link to v2:
>>> https://lore.kernel.org/all/[email protected]/
>>>
>>> Link to v1:
>>> https://lore.kernel.org/all/[email protected]/
>>>
>>> Kaitao Cheng (7):
>>> list: Add mutable iterator variants
>>> llist: Add mutable iterator variants
>>> mm: Use mutable list iterators
>>> block: Use mutable list iterators
>>> kernel: Use mutable list iterators
>>> initramfs: Use mutable list iterator
>>> io_uring: Use mutable list iterators
>>>
>>> block/bfq-iosched.c | 17 +-
>>> block/blk-cgroup.c | 12 +-
>>> block/blk-flush.c | 4 +-
>>> block/blk-iocost.c | 18 +-
>>> block/blk-mq.c | 8 +-
>>> block/blk-throttle.c | 4 +-
>>> block/kyber-iosched.c | 4 +-
>>> block/partitions/ldm.c | 8 +-
>>> block/sed-opal.c | 4 +-
>>> include/linux/list.h | 269 ++++++++++++++++++++++++----
>>> include/linux/llist.h | 81 +++++++--
>>> init/initramfs.c | 5 +-
>>> io_uring/cancel.c | 6 +-
>>> io_uring/poll.c | 3 +-
>>> io_uring/rw.c | 4 +-
>>> io_uring/timeout.c | 8 +-
>>> io_uring/uring_cmd.c | 3 +-
>>> kernel/audit_tree.c | 4 +-
>>> kernel/audit_watch.c | 16 +-
>>> kernel/auditfilter.c | 4 +-
>>> kernel/auditsc.c | 4 +-
>>> kernel/bpf/arena.c | 10 +-
>>> kernel/bpf/arraymap.c | 8 +-
>>> kernel/bpf/bpf_local_storage.c | 3 +-
>>> kernel/bpf/bpf_lru_list.c | 25 ++-
>>> kernel/bpf/btf.c | 18 +-
>>> kernel/bpf/cgroup.c | 7 +-
>>> kernel/bpf/cpumap.c | 4 +-
>>> kernel/bpf/devmap.c | 10 +-
>>> kernel/bpf/helpers.c | 8 +-
>>> kernel/bpf/local_storage.c | 4 +-
>>> kernel/bpf/memalloc.c | 16 +-
>>> kernel/bpf/offload.c | 8 +-
>>> kernel/bpf/states.c | 4 +-
>>> kernel/bpf/stream.c | 4 +-
>>> kernel/bpf/verifier.c | 6 +-
>>> kernel/cgroup/cgroup-v1.c | 4 +-
>>> kernel/cgroup/cgroup.c | 54 +++---
>>> kernel/cgroup/dmem.c | 12 +-
>>> kernel/cgroup/rdma.c | 8 +-
>>> kernel/events/core.c | 44 +++--
>>> kernel/events/uprobes.c | 12 +-
>>> kernel/exit.c | 8 +-
>>> kernel/fail_function.c | 4 +-
>>> kernel/gcov/clang.c | 4 +-
>>> kernel/irq_work.c | 4 +-
>>> kernel/kexec_core.c | 4 +-
>>> kernel/kprobes.c | 16 +-
>>> kernel/livepatch/core.c | 4 +-
>>> kernel/livepatch/core.h | 4 +-
>>> kernel/liveupdate/kho_block.c | 4 +-
>>> kernel/liveupdate/luo_flb.c | 4 +-
>>> kernel/locking/rwsem.c | 2 +-
>>> kernel/locking/test-ww_mutex.c | 2 +-
>>> kernel/module/main.c | 11 +-
>>> kernel/padata.c | 4 +-
>>> kernel/power/snapshot.c | 8 +-
>>> kernel/power/wakelock.c | 4 +-
>>> kernel/printk/printk.c | 11 +-
>>> kernel/ptrace.c | 4 +-
>>> kernel/rcu/rcutorture.c | 3 +-
>>> kernel/rcu/tasks.h | 9 +-
>>> kernel/rcu/tree.c | 6 +-
>>> kernel/resource.c | 4 +-
>>> kernel/sched/core.c | 4 +-
>>> kernel/sched/ext.c | 22 +--
>>> kernel/sched/fair.c | 28 +--
>>> kernel/sched/topology.c | 4 +-
>>> kernel/sched/wait.c | 4 +-
>>> kernel/seccomp.c | 4 +-
>>> kernel/signal.c | 11 +-
>>> kernel/smp.c | 4 +-
>>> kernel/taskstats.c | 8 +-
>>> kernel/time/clockevents.c | 6 +-
>>> kernel/time/clocksource.c | 4 +-
>>> kernel/time/posix-cpu-timers.c | 4 +-
>>> kernel/time/posix-timers.c | 3 +-
>>> kernel/torture.c | 3 +-
>>> kernel/trace/bpf_trace.c | 4 +-
>>> kernel/trace/ftrace.c | 49 +++--
>>> kernel/trace/ring_buffer.c | 25 ++-
>>> kernel/trace/trace.c | 12 +-
>>> kernel/trace/trace_dynevent.c | 6 +-
>>> kernel/trace/trace_dynevent.h | 5 +-
>>> kernel/trace/trace_events.c | 35 ++--
>>> kernel/trace/trace_events_filter.c | 4 +-
>>> kernel/trace/trace_events_hist.c | 8 +-
>>> kernel/trace/trace_events_trigger.c | 17 +-
>>> kernel/trace/trace_events_user.c | 16 +-
>>> kernel/trace/trace_stat.c | 4 +-
>>> kernel/user-return-notifier.c | 3 +-
>>> kernel/workqueue.c | 16 +-
>>> mm/backing-dev.c | 8 +-
>>> mm/balloon.c | 8 +-
>>> mm/cma.c | 4 +-
>>> mm/compaction.c | 4 +-
>>> mm/damon/core.c | 4 +-
>>> mm/damon/sysfs-schemes.c | 4 +-
>>> mm/dmapool.c | 4 +-
>>> mm/huge_memory.c | 8 +-
>>> mm/hugetlb.c | 56 +++---
>>> mm/hugetlb_vmemmap.c | 16 +-
>>> mm/khugepaged.c | 14 +-
>>> mm/kmemleak.c | 7 +-
>>> mm/ksm.c | 25 +--
>>> mm/list_lru.c | 4 +-
>>> mm/memcontrol-v1.c | 8 +-
>>> mm/memory-failure.c | 12 +-
>>> mm/memory-tiers.c | 4 +-
>>> mm/migrate.c | 23 ++-
>>> mm/mmu_notifier.c | 9 +-
>>> mm/page_alloc.c | 8 +-
>>> mm/page_reporting.c | 2 +-
>>> mm/percpu.c | 11 +-
>>> mm/pgtable-generic.c | 4 +-
>>> mm/rmap.c | 10 +-
>>> mm/shmem.c | 9 +-
>>> mm/slab_common.c | 14 +-
>>> mm/slub.c | 33 ++--
>>> mm/swapfile.c | 4 +-
>>> mm/userfaultfd.c | 12 +-
>>> mm/vmalloc.c | 24 +--
>>> mm/vmscan.c | 7 +-
>>> mm/zsmalloc.c | 4 +-
>>> 124 files changed, 875 insertions(+), 681 deletions(-)
>>
>> Not sure what you were thinking, but this diff stat
>> is not landable.
>
> Agreed. If we decide we want this, I guess we should target per-subsystem
> conversions.
>
> If this goes through the MM tree, I would even appreciate doing this on a
> per-MM
> component granularity.
>
> (unless we have some magic "Linus converts all of them" script, which I doubt
> we
> will have)
I strongly agree with the point above.
> Is there a way forward to replace list_for_each_*_safe entirely, possibly just
> reusing the old name but simply the parameter?
David Laight, Christian König, and Jani Nikula do not agree with using
clever macro syntax to support both calling forms at the same time,
so for now it is not possible to keep the original macro name and only
simplify the parameter. I may revert to the v1 version and ask everyone
for their opinions again.
--
Thanks
Kaitao Cheng