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authorDavid Howells <dhowells@redhat.com>2020-01-14 17:07:11 +0000
committerDavid Howells <dhowells@redhat.com>2020-05-19 15:08:24 +0100
commitc73be61cede5882f9605a852414db559c0ebedfd (patch)
treead099e88740a192887942623c5fe616ee4de5e30 /init
parentpipe: Add O_NOTIFICATION_PIPE (diff)
downloadwireguard-linux-c73be61cede5882f9605a852414db559c0ebedfd.tar.xz
wireguard-linux-c73be61cede5882f9605a852414db559c0ebedfd.zip
pipe: Add general notification queue support
Make it possible to have a general notification queue built on top of a standard pipe. Notifications are 'spliced' into the pipe and then read out. splice(), vmsplice() and sendfile() are forbidden on pipes used for notifications as post_one_notification() cannot take pipe->mutex. This means that notifications could be posted in between individual pipe buffers, making iov_iter_revert() difficult to effect. The way the notification queue is used is: (1) An application opens a pipe with a special flag and indicates the number of messages it wishes to be able to queue at once (this can only be set once): pipe2(fds, O_NOTIFICATION_PIPE); ioctl(fds[0], IOC_WATCH_QUEUE_SET_SIZE, queue_depth); (2) The application then uses poll() and read() as normal to extract data from the pipe. read() will return multiple notifications if the buffer is big enough, but it will not split a notification across buffers - rather it will return a short read or EMSGSIZE. Notification messages include a length in the header so that the caller can split them up. Each message has a header that describes it: struct watch_notification { __u32 type:24; __u32 subtype:8; __u32 info; }; The type indicates the source (eg. mount tree changes, superblock events, keyring changes, block layer events) and the subtype indicates the event type (eg. mount, unmount; EIO, EDQUOT; link, unlink). The info field indicates a number of things, including the entry length, an ID assigned to a watchpoint contributing to this buffer and type-specific flags. Supplementary data, such as the key ID that generated an event, can be attached in additional slots. The maximum message size is 127 bytes. Messages may not be padded or aligned, so there is no guarantee, for example, that the notification type will be on a 4-byte bounary. Signed-off-by: David Howells <dhowells@redhat.com>
Diffstat (limited to 'init')
-rw-r--r--init/Kconfig12
1 files changed, 12 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/init/Kconfig b/init/Kconfig
index 74a5ac65644f..c95a2a5654a9 100644
--- a/init/Kconfig
+++ b/init/Kconfig
@@ -326,6 +326,18 @@ config POSIX_MQUEUE_SYSCTL
depends on SYSCTL
default y
+config WATCH_QUEUE
+ bool "General notification queue"
+ default n
+ help
+
+ This is a general notification queue for the kernel to pass events to
+ userspace by splicing them into pipes. It can be used in conjunction
+ with watches for key/keyring change notifications and device
+ notifications.
+
+ See Documentation/watch_queue.rst
+
config CROSS_MEMORY_ATTACH
bool "Enable process_vm_readv/writev syscalls"
depends on MMU