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Message-Id: <1216827187.7257.189.camel@twins>
Date: Wed, 23 Jul 2008 17:33:07 +0200
From: Peter Zijlstra <peterz@...radead.org>
To: "Frank Ch. Eigler" <fche@...hat.com>
Cc: Rik van Riel <riel@...hat.com>,
James Bottomley <James.Bottomley@...senPartnership.com>,
Masami Hiramatsu <mhiramat@...hat.com>,
linux-kernel <linux-kernel@...r.kernel.org>,
systemtap@...rceware.org
Subject: Re: systemtap & backward compatibility, was Re: [RFC] systemtap:
begin the process of using proper kernel APIs
On Wed, 2008-07-23 at 11:04 -0400, Frank Ch. Eigler wrote:
> Hi -
>
> I wrote:
>
> > > [...] One significant requirement for us is to keep working with
> > > older kernels. [...]
>
> Maybe it's worth elaborating on why the need for backward
> compatibility is different for systemtap than for typical kernel-side
> code.
>
> The bulk of systemtap is a user-space program, and it does very
> user-spacey things like parsing dwarf and invoking compilers, running
> network servers. Soon it will include user-space libraries. It is so
> different from the stuff normally found there that no one has AFAIK
> seriously proposed that the entire software be made part of the kernel
> git tree. So it is an ordinary separate user-space package, built by
> users and distributors.
>
> It does happen to *generate* kernel modules. The way that such a
> module must interface with any particular kernel is naturally subject
> to the whims & desires of the kernel du jour. This is why we have a
> mass of mechanism to try to automatically speak to each kernel version
> as appropriate.
>
> It is desirable to minimize this mass for obvious reasons. When a new
> upstream kernel comes out with a tasty new feature -- or a less tasty
> API rewrite -- we need to extend systemtap to support that too. We
> cannot easily take old support away, because then the same user-space
> code base would no longer run against actually installed kernels.
>
> To draw an analogy, systemtap is somewhat like low-level userspace
> code like glibc or syslogd or udevd. I hope no one would seriously
> propose casually committing code to those packages that would make
> them unusable on prior kernel versions. Accepting such a patch would
> require their maintainers to fork outright every time a kernel change
> occurs.
>
> Things are good however if the low-level userspace changes are
> backward-compatible, so that the new kernel facility is used when
> present, but the software does not regress if it is not. I believe
> this is what we need to aim for, even though it puts the bulk of the
> burden on systemtap (or glibc, or ...).
>
> I hope this fills in some of the gaps in the background.
Why does a new version of stap have to work on ancient kernels?
A new gnome version requires a new gtk version, a new kde version
requires a new qt etc.. so why does a new stap not require a new kernel?
Why isn't only supporting the last few kernels, say for example as far
back as there are -stable series at the moment of release, good enough?
People who insist on running stale kernels are usually the same people
who run stale userspace - we call those enterprise people - so why can't
they run matching stale version of the kernel and stap?
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