On Fri, Apr 19, 2019 at 12:49 PM Joel Fernandes joel@joelfernandes.org wrote:
On Fri, Apr 19, 2019 at 09:18:59PM +0200, Christian Brauner wrote:
On Fri, Apr 19, 2019 at 03:02:47PM -0400, Joel Fernandes wrote:
On Thu, Apr 18, 2019 at 07:26:44PM +0200, Christian Brauner wrote:
On April 18, 2019 7:23:38 PM GMT+02:00, Jann Horn jannh@google.com wrote:
On Wed, Apr 17, 2019 at 3:09 PM Oleg Nesterov oleg@redhat.com wrote:
On 04/16, Joel Fernandes wrote: > On Tue, Apr 16, 2019 at 02:04:31PM +0200, Oleg Nesterov wrote: > > > > Could you explain when it should return POLLIN? When the whole
process exits?
> > It returns POLLIN when the task is dead or doesn't exist anymore,
or when it
> is in a zombie state and there's no other thread in the thread
group.
IOW, when the whole thread group exits, so it can't be used to
monitor sub-threads.
just in case... speaking of this patch it doesn't modify
proc_tid_base_operations,
so you can't poll("/proc/sub-thread-tid") anyway, but iiuc you are
going to use
the anonymous file returned by CLONE_PIDFD ?
I don't think procfs works that way. /proc/sub-thread-tid has proc_tgid_base_operations despite not being a thread group leader. (Yes, that's kinda weird.) AFAICS the WARN_ON_ONCE() in this code can be hit trivially, and then the code will misbehave.
@Joel: I think you'll have to either rewrite this to explicitly bail out if you're dealing with a thread group leader, or make the code work for threads, too.
The latter case probably being preferred if this API is supposed to be useable for thread management in userspace.
At the moment, we are not planning to use this for sub-thread management. I am reworking this patch to only work on clone(2) pidfds which makes the above
Indeed and agreed.
discussion about /proc a bit unnecessary I think. Per the latest CLONE_PIDFD patches, CLONE_THREAD with pidfd is not supported.
Yes. We have no one asking for it right now and we can easily add this later.
Admittedly I haven't gotten around to reviewing the patches here yet completely. But one thing about using POLLIN. FreeBSD is using POLLHUP on process exit which I think is nice as well. How about returning POLLIN | POLLHUP on process exit? We already do things like this. For example, when you proxy between ttys. If the process that you're reading data from has exited and closed it's end you still can't usually simply exit because it might have still buffered data that you want to read. The way one can deal with this from userspace is that you can observe a (POLLHUP | POLLIN) event and you keep on reading until you only observe a POLLHUP without a POLLIN event at which point you know you have read all data. I like the semantics for pidfds as well as it would indicate:
- POLLHUP -> process has exited
- POLLIN -> information can be read
Actually I think a bit different about this, in my opinion the pidfd should always be readable (we would store the exit status somewhere in the future which would be readable, even after task_struct is dead). So I was thinking we always return EPOLLIN. If process has not exited, then it blocks.
ITYM that a pidfd polls as readable *once a task exits* and stays readable forever. Before a task exit, a poll on a pidfd should *not* yield POLLIN and reading that pidfd should *not* complete immediately. There's no way that, having observed POLLIN on a pidfd, you should ever then *not* see POLLIN on that pidfd in the future --- it's a one-way transition from not-ready-to-get-exit-status to ready-to-get-exit-status.
Besides, didn't Linux say that he wanted waitpid(2) to be the function for exit status on a pidfd, not read(2)? It doesn't really matter: POLLIN on a pidfd would just make "I, the kernel, say that waitpid on this FD won't block", whereas for something like socket, it would mean "I, the kernel, say read(2) on this FD won't block".
I don't see the need for POLLHUP in pidfds at all. IMHO, we shouldn't include it. "Hangup" doesn't have an obvious meaning distinct from exit, and we might want the POLLHUP bit for something else in the future. What would a caller do with POLLHUP? If the answer is "something to do with ptrace", let's defer that to some future work, since ptrace has a ton of moving parts I don't want to consider right now.