1Adding a New System Call 2======================== 3 4This document describes what's involved in adding a new system call to the 5Linux kernel, over and above the normal submission advice in 6:ref:`Documentation/process/submitting-patches.rst <submittingpatches>`. 7 8 9System Call Alternatives 10------------------------ 11 12The first thing to consider when adding a new system call is whether one of 13the alternatives might be suitable instead. Although system calls are the 14most traditional and most obvious interaction points between userspace and the 15kernel, there are other possibilities -- choose what fits best for your 16interface. 17 18 - If the operations involved can be made to look like a filesystem-like 19 object, it may make more sense to create a new filesystem or device. This 20 also makes it easier to encapsulate the new functionality in a kernel module 21 rather than requiring it to be built into the main kernel. 22 23 - If the new functionality involves operations where the kernel notifies 24 userspace that something has happened, then returning a new file 25 descriptor for the relevant object allows userspace to use 26 ``poll``/``select``/``epoll`` to receive that notification. 27 - However, operations that don't map to 28 :manpage:`read(2)`/:manpage:`write(2)`-like operations 29 have to be implemented as :manpage:`ioctl(2)` requests, which can lead 30 to a somewhat opaque API. 31 32 - If you're just exposing runtime system information, a new node in sysfs 33 (see ``Documentation/filesystems/sysfs.txt``) or the ``/proc`` filesystem may 34 be more appropriate. However, access to these mechanisms requires that the 35 relevant filesystem is mounted, which might not always be the case (e.g. 36 in a namespaced/sandboxed/chrooted environment). Avoid adding any API to 37 debugfs, as this is not considered a 'production' interface to userspace. 38 - If the operation is specific to a particular file or file descriptor, then 39 an additional :manpage:`fcntl(2)` command option may be more appropriate. However, 40 :manpage:`fcntl(2)` is a multiplexing system call that hides a lot of complexity, so 41 this option is best for when the new function is closely analogous to 42 existing :manpage:`fcntl(2)` functionality, or the new functionality is very simple 43 (for example, getting/setting a simple flag related to a file descriptor). 44 - If the operation is specific to a particular task or process, then an 45 additional :manpage:`prctl(2)` command option may be more appropriate. As 46 with :manpage:`fcntl(2)`, this system call is a complicated multiplexor so 47 is best reserved for near-analogs of existing ``prctl()`` commands or 48 getting/setting a simple flag related to a process. 49 50 51Designing the API: Planning for Extension 52----------------------------------------- 53 54A new system call forms part of the API of the kernel, and has to be supported 55indefinitely. As such, it's a very good idea to explicitly discuss the 56interface on the kernel mailing list, and it's important to plan for future 57extensions of the interface. 58 59(The syscall table is littered with historical examples where this wasn't done, 60together with the corresponding follow-up system calls -- 61``eventfd``/``eventfd2``, ``dup2``/``dup3``, ``inotify_init``/``inotify_init1``, 62``pipe``/``pipe2``, ``renameat``/``renameat2`` -- so 63learn from the history of the kernel and plan for extensions from the start.) 64 65For simpler system calls that only take a couple of arguments, the preferred 66way to allow for future extensibility is to include a flags argument to the 67system call. To make sure that userspace programs can safely use flags 68between kernel versions, check whether the flags value holds any unknown 69flags, and reject the system call (with ``EINVAL``) if it does:: 70 71 if (flags & ~(THING_FLAG1 | THING_FLAG2 | THING_FLAG3)) 72 return -EINVAL; 73 74(If no flags values are used yet, check that the flags argument is zero.) 75 76For more sophisticated system calls that involve a larger number of arguments, 77it's preferred to encapsulate the majority of the arguments into a structure 78that is passed in by pointer. Such a structure can cope with future extension 79by including a size argument in the structure:: 80 81 struct xyzzy_params { 82 u32 size; /* userspace sets p->size = sizeof(struct xyzzy_params) */ 83 u32 param_1; 84 u64 param_2; 85 u64 param_3; 86 }; 87 88As long as any subsequently added field, say ``param_4``, is designed so that a 89zero value gives the previous behaviour, then this allows both directions of 90version mismatch: 91 92 - To cope with a later userspace program calling an older kernel, the kernel 93 code should check that any memory beyond the size of the structure that it 94 expects is zero (effectively checking that ``param_4 == 0``). 95 - To cope with an older userspace program calling a newer kernel, the kernel 96 code can zero-extend a smaller instance of the structure (effectively 97 setting ``param_4 = 0``). 98 99See :manpage:`perf_event_open(2)` and the ``perf_copy_attr()`` function (in 100``kernel/events/core.c``) for an example of this approach. 101 102 103Designing the API: Other Considerations 104--------------------------------------- 105 106If your new system call allows userspace to refer to a kernel object, it 107should use a file descriptor as the handle for that object -- don't invent a 108new type of userspace object handle when the kernel already has mechanisms and 109well-defined semantics for using file descriptors. 110 111If your new :manpage:`xyzzy(2)` system call does return a new file descriptor, 112then the flags argument should include a value that is equivalent to setting 113``O_CLOEXEC`` on the new FD. This makes it possible for userspace to close 114the timing window between ``xyzzy()`` and calling 115``fcntl(fd, F_SETFD, FD_CLOEXEC)``, where an unexpected ``fork()`` and 116``execve()`` in another thread could leak a descriptor to 117the exec'ed program. (However, resist the temptation to re-use the actual value 118of the ``O_CLOEXEC`` constant, as it is architecture-specific and is part of a 119numbering space of ``O_*`` flags that is fairly full.) 120 121If your system call returns a new file descriptor, you should also consider 122what it means to use the :manpage:`poll(2)` family of system calls on that file 123descriptor. Making a file descriptor ready for reading or writing is the 124normal way for the kernel to indicate to userspace that an event has 125occurred on the corresponding kernel object. 126 127If your new :manpage:`xyzzy(2)` system call involves a filename argument:: 128 129 int sys_xyzzy(const char __user *path, ..., unsigned int flags); 130 131you should also consider whether an :manpage:`xyzzyat(2)` version is more appropriate:: 132 133 int sys_xyzzyat(int dfd, const char __user *path, ..., unsigned int flags); 134 135This allows more flexibility for how userspace specifies the file in question; 136in particular it allows userspace to request the functionality for an 137already-opened file descriptor using the ``AT_EMPTY_PATH`` flag, effectively 138giving an :manpage:`fxyzzy(3)` operation for free:: 139 140 - xyzzyat(AT_FDCWD, path, ..., 0) is equivalent to xyzzy(path,...) 141 - xyzzyat(fd, "", ..., AT_EMPTY_PATH) is equivalent to fxyzzy(fd, ...) 142 143(For more details on the rationale of the \*at() calls, see the 144:manpage:`openat(2)` man page; for an example of AT_EMPTY_PATH, see the 145:manpage:`fstatat(2)` man page.) 146 147If your new :manpage:`xyzzy(2)` system call involves a parameter describing an 148offset within a file, make its type ``loff_t`` so that 64-bit offsets can be 149supported even on 32-bit architectures. 150 151If your new :manpage:`xyzzy(2)` system call involves privileged functionality, 152it needs to be governed by the appropriate Linux capability bit (checked with 153a call to ``capable()``), as described in the :manpage:`capabilities(7)` man 154page. Choose an existing capability bit that governs related functionality, 155but try to avoid combining lots of only vaguely related functions together 156under the same bit, as this goes against capabilities' purpose of splitting 157the power of root. In particular, avoid adding new uses of the already 158overly-general ``CAP_SYS_ADMIN`` capability. 159 160If your new :manpage:`xyzzy(2)` system call manipulates a process other than 161the calling process, it should be restricted (using a call to 162``ptrace_may_access()``) so that only a calling process with the same 163permissions as the target process, or with the necessary capabilities, can 164manipulate the target process. 165 166Finally, be aware that some non-x86 architectures have an easier time if 167system call parameters that are explicitly 64-bit fall on odd-numbered 168arguments (i.e. parameter 1, 3, 5), to allow use of contiguous pairs of 32-bit 169registers. (This concern does not apply if the arguments are part of a 170structure that's passed in by pointer.) 171 172 173Proposing the API 174----------------- 175 176To make new system calls easy to review, it's best to divide up the patchset 177into separate chunks. These should include at least the following items as 178distinct commits (each of which is described further below): 179 180 - The core implementation of the system call, together with prototypes, 181 generic numbering, Kconfig changes and fallback stub implementation. 182 - Wiring up of the new system call for one particular architecture, usually 183 x86 (including all of x86_64, x86_32 and x32). 184 - A demonstration of the use of the new system call in userspace via a 185 selftest in ``tools/testing/selftests/``. 186 - A draft man-page for the new system call, either as plain text in the 187 cover letter, or as a patch to the (separate) man-pages repository. 188 189New system call proposals, like any change to the kernel's API, should always 190be cc'ed to linux-api@vger.kernel.org. 191 192 193Generic System Call Implementation 194---------------------------------- 195 196The main entry point for your new :manpage:`xyzzy(2)` system call will be called 197``sys_xyzzy()``, but you add this entry point with the appropriate 198``SYSCALL_DEFINEn()`` macro rather than explicitly. The 'n' indicates the 199number of arguments to the system call, and the macro takes the system call name 200followed by the (type, name) pairs for the parameters as arguments. Using 201this macro allows metadata about the new system call to be made available for 202other tools. 203 204The new entry point also needs a corresponding function prototype, in 205``include/linux/syscalls.h``, marked as asmlinkage to match the way that system 206calls are invoked:: 207 208 asmlinkage long sys_xyzzy(...); 209 210Some architectures (e.g. x86) have their own architecture-specific syscall 211tables, but several other architectures share a generic syscall table. Add your 212new system call to the generic list by adding an entry to the list in 213``include/uapi/asm-generic/unistd.h``:: 214 215 #define __NR_xyzzy 292 216 __SYSCALL(__NR_xyzzy, sys_xyzzy) 217 218Also update the __NR_syscalls count to reflect the additional system call, and 219note that if multiple new system calls are added in the same merge window, 220your new syscall number may get adjusted to resolve conflicts. 221 222The file ``kernel/sys_ni.c`` provides a fallback stub implementation of each 223system call, returning ``-ENOSYS``. Add your new system call here too:: 224 225 cond_syscall(sys_xyzzy); 226 227Your new kernel functionality, and the system call that controls it, should 228normally be optional, so add a ``CONFIG`` option (typically to 229``init/Kconfig``) for it. As usual for new ``CONFIG`` options: 230 231 - Include a description of the new functionality and system call controlled 232 by the option. 233 - Make the option depend on EXPERT if it should be hidden from normal users. 234 - Make any new source files implementing the function dependent on the CONFIG 235 option in the Makefile (e.g. ``obj-$(CONFIG_XYZZY_SYSCALL) += xyzzy.c``). 236 - Double check that the kernel still builds with the new CONFIG option turned 237 off. 238 239To summarize, you need a commit that includes: 240 241 - ``CONFIG`` option for the new function, normally in ``init/Kconfig`` 242 - ``SYSCALL_DEFINEn(xyzzy, ...)`` for the entry point 243 - corresponding prototype in ``include/linux/syscalls.h`` 244 - generic table entry in ``include/uapi/asm-generic/unistd.h`` 245 - fallback stub in ``kernel/sys_ni.c`` 246 247 248x86 System Call Implementation 249------------------------------ 250 251To wire up your new system call for x86 platforms, you need to update the 252master syscall tables. Assuming your new system call isn't special in some 253way (see below), this involves a "common" entry (for x86_64 and x32) in 254arch/x86/entry/syscalls/syscall_64.tbl:: 255 256 333 common xyzzy sys_xyzzy 257 258and an "i386" entry in ``arch/x86/entry/syscalls/syscall_32.tbl``:: 259 260 380 i386 xyzzy sys_xyzzy 261 262Again, these numbers are liable to be changed if there are conflicts in the 263relevant merge window. 264 265 266Compatibility System Calls (Generic) 267------------------------------------ 268 269For most system calls the same 64-bit implementation can be invoked even when 270the userspace program is itself 32-bit; even if the system call's parameters 271include an explicit pointer, this is handled transparently. 272 273However, there are a couple of situations where a compatibility layer is 274needed to cope with size differences between 32-bit and 64-bit. 275 276The first is if the 64-bit kernel also supports 32-bit userspace programs, and 277so needs to parse areas of (``__user``) memory that could hold either 32-bit or 27864-bit values. In particular, this is needed whenever a system call argument 279is: 280 281 - a pointer to a pointer 282 - a pointer to a struct containing a pointer (e.g. ``struct iovec __user *``) 283 - a pointer to a varying sized integral type (``time_t``, ``off_t``, 284 ``long``, ...) 285 - a pointer to a struct containing a varying sized integral type. 286 287The second situation that requires a compatibility layer is if one of the 288system call's arguments has a type that is explicitly 64-bit even on a 32-bit 289architecture, for example ``loff_t`` or ``__u64``. In this case, a value that 290arrives at a 64-bit kernel from a 32-bit application will be split into two 29132-bit values, which then need to be re-assembled in the compatibility layer. 292 293(Note that a system call argument that's a pointer to an explicit 64-bit type 294does **not** need a compatibility layer; for example, :manpage:`splice(2)`'s arguments of 295type ``loff_t __user *`` do not trigger the need for a ``compat_`` system call.) 296 297The compatibility version of the system call is called ``compat_sys_xyzzy()``, 298and is added with the ``COMPAT_SYSCALL_DEFINEn()`` macro, analogously to 299SYSCALL_DEFINEn. This version of the implementation runs as part of a 64-bit 300kernel, but expects to receive 32-bit parameter values and does whatever is 301needed to deal with them. (Typically, the ``compat_sys_`` version converts the 302values to 64-bit versions and either calls on to the ``sys_`` version, or both of 303them call a common inner implementation function.) 304 305The compat entry point also needs a corresponding function prototype, in 306``include/linux/compat.h``, marked as asmlinkage to match the way that system 307calls are invoked:: 308 309 asmlinkage long compat_sys_xyzzy(...); 310 311If the system call involves a structure that is laid out differently on 32-bit 312and 64-bit systems, say ``struct xyzzy_args``, then the include/linux/compat.h 313header file should also include a compat version of the structure (``struct 314compat_xyzzy_args``) where each variable-size field has the appropriate 315``compat_`` type that corresponds to the type in ``struct xyzzy_args``. The 316``compat_sys_xyzzy()`` routine can then use this ``compat_`` structure to 317parse the arguments from a 32-bit invocation. 318 319For example, if there are fields:: 320 321 struct xyzzy_args { 322 const char __user *ptr; 323 __kernel_long_t varying_val; 324 u64 fixed_val; 325 /* ... */ 326 }; 327 328in struct xyzzy_args, then struct compat_xyzzy_args would have:: 329 330 struct compat_xyzzy_args { 331 compat_uptr_t ptr; 332 compat_long_t varying_val; 333 u64 fixed_val; 334 /* ... */ 335 }; 336 337The generic system call list also needs adjusting to allow for the compat 338version; the entry in ``include/uapi/asm-generic/unistd.h`` should use 339``__SC_COMP`` rather than ``__SYSCALL``:: 340 341 #define __NR_xyzzy 292 342 __SC_COMP(__NR_xyzzy, sys_xyzzy, compat_sys_xyzzy) 343 344To summarize, you need: 345 346 - a ``COMPAT_SYSCALL_DEFINEn(xyzzy, ...)`` for the compat entry point 347 - corresponding prototype in ``include/linux/compat.h`` 348 - (if needed) 32-bit mapping struct in ``include/linux/compat.h`` 349 - instance of ``__SC_COMP`` not ``__SYSCALL`` in 350 ``include/uapi/asm-generic/unistd.h`` 351 352 353Compatibility System Calls (x86) 354-------------------------------- 355 356To wire up the x86 architecture of a system call with a compatibility version, 357the entries in the syscall tables need to be adjusted. 358 359First, the entry in ``arch/x86/entry/syscalls/syscall_32.tbl`` gets an extra 360column to indicate that a 32-bit userspace program running on a 64-bit kernel 361should hit the compat entry point:: 362 363 380 i386 xyzzy sys_xyzzy compat_sys_xyzzy 364 365Second, you need to figure out what should happen for the x32 ABI version of 366the new system call. There's a choice here: the layout of the arguments 367should either match the 64-bit version or the 32-bit version. 368 369If there's a pointer-to-a-pointer involved, the decision is easy: x32 is 370ILP32, so the layout should match the 32-bit version, and the entry in 371``arch/x86/entry/syscalls/syscall_64.tbl`` is split so that x32 programs hit 372the compatibility wrapper:: 373 374 333 64 xyzzy sys_xyzzy 375 ... 376 555 x32 xyzzy compat_sys_xyzzy 377 378If no pointers are involved, then it is preferable to re-use the 64-bit system 379call for the x32 ABI (and consequently the entry in 380arch/x86/entry/syscalls/syscall_64.tbl is unchanged). 381 382In either case, you should check that the types involved in your argument 383layout do indeed map exactly from x32 (-mx32) to either the 32-bit (-m32) or 38464-bit (-m64) equivalents. 385 386 387System Calls Returning Elsewhere 388-------------------------------- 389 390For most system calls, once the system call is complete the user program 391continues exactly where it left off -- at the next instruction, with the 392stack the same and most of the registers the same as before the system call, 393and with the same virtual memory space. 394 395However, a few system calls do things differently. They might return to a 396different location (``rt_sigreturn``) or change the memory space 397(``fork``/``vfork``/``clone``) or even architecture (``execve``/``execveat``) 398of the program. 399 400To allow for this, the kernel implementation of the system call may need to 401save and restore additional registers to the kernel stack, allowing complete 402control of where and how execution continues after the system call. 403 404This is arch-specific, but typically involves defining assembly entry points 405that save/restore additional registers and invoke the real system call entry 406point. 407 408For x86_64, this is implemented as a ``stub_xyzzy`` entry point in 409``arch/x86/entry/entry_64.S``, and the entry in the syscall table 410(``arch/x86/entry/syscalls/syscall_64.tbl``) is adjusted to match:: 411 412 333 common xyzzy stub_xyzzy 413 414The equivalent for 32-bit programs running on a 64-bit kernel is normally 415called ``stub32_xyzzy`` and implemented in ``arch/x86/entry/entry_64_compat.S``, 416with the corresponding syscall table adjustment in 417``arch/x86/entry/syscalls/syscall_32.tbl``:: 418 419 380 i386 xyzzy sys_xyzzy stub32_xyzzy 420 421If the system call needs a compatibility layer (as in the previous section) 422then the ``stub32_`` version needs to call on to the ``compat_sys_`` version 423of the system call rather than the native 64-bit version. Also, if the x32 ABI 424implementation is not common with the x86_64 version, then its syscall 425table will also need to invoke a stub that calls on to the ``compat_sys_`` 426version. 427 428For completeness, it's also nice to set up a mapping so that user-mode Linux 429still works -- its syscall table will reference stub_xyzzy, but the UML build 430doesn't include ``arch/x86/entry/entry_64.S`` implementation (because UML 431simulates registers etc). Fixing this is as simple as adding a #define to 432``arch/x86/um/sys_call_table_64.c``:: 433 434 #define stub_xyzzy sys_xyzzy 435 436 437Other Details 438------------- 439 440Most of the kernel treats system calls in a generic way, but there is the 441occasional exception that may need updating for your particular system call. 442 443The audit subsystem is one such special case; it includes (arch-specific) 444functions that classify some special types of system call -- specifically 445file open (``open``/``openat``), program execution (``execve``/``exeveat``) or 446socket multiplexor (``socketcall``) operations. If your new system call is 447analogous to one of these, then the audit system should be updated. 448 449More generally, if there is an existing system call that is analogous to your 450new system call, it's worth doing a kernel-wide grep for the existing system 451call to check there are no other special cases. 452 453 454Testing 455------- 456 457A new system call should obviously be tested; it is also useful to provide 458reviewers with a demonstration of how user space programs will use the system 459call. A good way to combine these aims is to include a simple self-test 460program in a new directory under ``tools/testing/selftests/``. 461 462For a new system call, there will obviously be no libc wrapper function and so 463the test will need to invoke it using ``syscall()``; also, if the system call 464involves a new userspace-visible structure, the corresponding header will need 465to be installed to compile the test. 466 467Make sure the selftest runs successfully on all supported architectures. For 468example, check that it works when compiled as an x86_64 (-m64), x86_32 (-m32) 469and x32 (-mx32) ABI program. 470 471For more extensive and thorough testing of new functionality, you should also 472consider adding tests to the Linux Test Project, or to the xfstests project 473for filesystem-related changes. 474 475 - https://linux-test-project.github.io/ 476 - git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/fs/xfs/xfstests-dev.git 477 478 479Man Page 480-------- 481 482All new system calls should come with a complete man page, ideally using groff 483markup, but plain text will do. If groff is used, it's helpful to include a 484pre-rendered ASCII version of the man page in the cover email for the 485patchset, for the convenience of reviewers. 486 487The man page should be cc'ed to linux-man@vger.kernel.org 488For more details, see https://www.kernel.org/doc/man-pages/patches.html 489 490References and Sources 491---------------------- 492 493 - LWN article from Michael Kerrisk on use of flags argument in system calls: 494 https://lwn.net/Articles/585415/ 495 - LWN article from Michael Kerrisk on how to handle unknown flags in a system 496 call: https://lwn.net/Articles/588444/ 497 - LWN article from Jake Edge describing constraints on 64-bit system call 498 arguments: https://lwn.net/Articles/311630/ 499 - Pair of LWN articles from David Drysdale that describe the system call 500 implementation paths in detail for v3.14: 501 502 - https://lwn.net/Articles/604287/ 503 - https://lwn.net/Articles/604515/ 504 505 - Architecture-specific requirements for system calls are discussed in the 506 :manpage:`syscall(2)` man-page: 507 http://man7.org/linux/man-pages/man2/syscall.2.html#NOTES 508 - Collated emails from Linus Torvalds discussing the problems with ``ioctl()``: 509 http://yarchive.net/comp/linux/ioctl.html 510 - "How to not invent kernel interfaces", Arnd Bergmann, 511 http://www.ukuug.org/events/linux2007/2007/papers/Bergmann.pdf 512 - LWN article from Michael Kerrisk on avoiding new uses of CAP_SYS_ADMIN: 513 https://lwn.net/Articles/486306/ 514 - Recommendation from Andrew Morton that all related information for a new 515 system call should come in the same email thread: 516 https://lkml.org/lkml/2014/7/24/641 517 - Recommendation from Michael Kerrisk that a new system call should come with 518 a man page: https://lkml.org/lkml/2014/6/13/309 519 - Suggestion from Thomas Gleixner that x86 wire-up should be in a separate 520 commit: https://lkml.org/lkml/2014/11/19/254 521 - Suggestion from Greg Kroah-Hartman that it's good for new system calls to 522 come with a man-page & selftest: https://lkml.org/lkml/2014/3/19/710 523 - Discussion from Michael Kerrisk of new system call vs. :manpage:`prctl(2)` extension: 524 https://lkml.org/lkml/2014/6/3/411 525 - Suggestion from Ingo Molnar that system calls that involve multiple 526 arguments should encapsulate those arguments in a struct, which includes a 527 size field for future extensibility: https://lkml.org/lkml/2015/7/30/117 528 - Numbering oddities arising from (re-)use of O_* numbering space flags: 529 530 - commit 75069f2b5bfb ("vfs: renumber FMODE_NONOTIFY and add to uniqueness 531 check") 532 - commit 12ed2e36c98a ("fanotify: FMODE_NONOTIFY and __O_SYNC in sparc 533 conflict") 534 - commit bb458c644a59 ("Safer ABI for O_TMPFILE") 535 536 - Discussion from Matthew Wilcox about restrictions on 64-bit arguments: 537 https://lkml.org/lkml/2008/12/12/187 538 - Recommendation from Greg Kroah-Hartman that unknown flags should be 539 policed: https://lkml.org/lkml/2014/7/17/577 540 - Recommendation from Linus Torvalds that x32 system calls should prefer 541 compatibility with 64-bit versions rather than 32-bit versions: 542 https://lkml.org/lkml/2011/8/31/244 543