Re: [PATCH] Futex Asynchronous Interface

Kai Henningsen (kaih@khms.westfalen.de)
10 Jun 2002 08:39:00 +0200


torvalds@transmeta.com (Linus Torvalds) wrote on 09.06.02 in <Pine.LNX.4.44.0206091056550.13459-100000@home.transmeta.com>:

> On 9 Jun 2002, Kai Henningsen wrote:
> >
> > However, I don't think that's all that important. What I'd rather see is
> > making the network devices into namespace nodes. The situation of eth0 and
> > friends, from a Unix perspective, is utterly unnatural.
>
> But what would you _do_ with them? What would be the advantage as compared
> to the current situation?

For one, enumerate them. Network interfaces, as opposed to sockets, are
fairly static. And currently I have to either call /sbin/ifconfig or
figure out where this information is hidden in /proc. (And there is a
kernel interface, I think, some ioctl() stuff - I have mostly forgotten
all I learned about that, it was so ugly.)

Doesn't need to be /dev/xxx nodes (that *would* be the traditional Unix
way) - these days I'd argue for a special network device fs.

> Now, to configure a device, you get a fd to the device the same way you
> get a fd _anyway_ - with "socket()".

address "eth0" - which might have been halfway reasonable - but instead
you say *that* with some ioctl().

> And anybody who says that "socket()" is utterly unnatural to the UNIX way
> is quite far out to lunch. It may be unnatural to the Plan-9 way of
> "everything is a namespace", but that was never the UNIX way. The UNIX way
> is "everything is a file descriptor or a process", but that was never
> about namespaces.
>
> Yes, some old-timers could argue that original UNIX didn't have sockets,
> and that the BSD interface is ugly and an abomination and that it _should_
> have been a namespace thing, but that argument falls flat on its face when
> you realize that the "pipe()" system call _was_ in original UNIX, and has
> all the same issues.

On the other hand, pipe() is about *anonymous* files. You could in fact
argue that it would be nice to have an interface for anonymous disk files
as well, instead of all the current acrobatics for safe temp file
creation.

> Don't get hung up about names.

Especially not if your argument is then about situations where you atually
don't want a name.

See, the problem with eth0 and friends is that they already *have* names -
their names just aren't in the standard namespace. *That* is the real
problem here.

Unix tradition or not, I propose the rule:

*Any kernel object that has a text name, shall appear,*
*under this name, somewhere in the filesystem.*

Or in other words, *there can only be one namespace*. (Well, only one
global namespace, anyway.)

MfG Kai
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