A further though on /proc/PID/timens_offsets

Eric W. Biederman ebiederm at xmission.com
Thu Apr 9 21:32:21 UTC 2020


Andrey Vagin <avagin at openvz.org> writes:

> On Tue, Apr 7, 2020 at 6:24 AM Michael Kerrisk (man-pages)
> <mtk.manpages at gmail.com> wrote:
>
>>        The  clock-id  identifies the clock whose offsets are being shown.
>>        This field is either 1, for CLOCK_MONOTONIC, or 7, for CLOCK_BOOT‐
>>        TIME.
>>
>> What was the reason for exposing numeric clock IDs in the
>> timens_offsets file? In API terms, that seems a little ugly.
>>
>> I think it would have been much nicer if the clocks were defined
>> symbolically in this file. I.e., that reading the file would have
>> shown something like
>>
>> monotonic    x    y
>> boottime     x    y
>>
>> And that records similarly with symbolic clock names could have
>> been written to the file. Was there a reason not to do this?
>
> No, there was not except that I haven't thought about this. I agree
> that symbolic clock names looks nicer for humans, but numeric clock
> IDs are a bit more convenient when we  need to set/read offsets from
> code. This interface is in the released kernel, so I think we can't
> change the format of the content of this file. But we can add support
> of symbolic clock names for setting clock offsets. What do you think?

The rule is we can change things as long as userspace doesn't care.  For
very new interfaces like this it is possible there are few enough
userspace programs that nothing cares.

Do you know if someone is using this interface yet?

Eric


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