On Mon, Jul 16, 2018 at 06:10:52PM +0200, Arnd Bergmann wrote:
> When 32-bit architectures get changed to support 64-bit time_t,
> utimensat() needs to use the new __kernel_timespec structure as its
> argument.
> 
> The older utime(), utimes() and futimesat() system calls don't need a
> corresponding change as they are no longer used on C libraries that have
> 64-bit time support.
> 
> As we do for the other syscalls that have timespec arguments, we reuse
> the 'compat' syscall entry points to implement the traditional four
> interfaces, and only leave the new utimensat() as a native handler,
> so that the same code gets used on both 32-bit and 64-bit kernels
> on each syscall.

I wonder about the direction here:  wouldn't it be easier to just
leave th existing syscall names as-is and introduce a new utimesat64
which uses the new timespec?  We can then drop the old legacy utimesat
for new architectures added after the cutover.
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