Linux kernel interfaces

Linux API, Linux ABI, and in-kernel APIs and ABIs

The Linux kernel provides several interfaces to user-space applications that are used for different purposes and that have different properties by design. There are two types of application programming interface (API) in the Linux kernel that are not to be confused: the "kerneluser space" API and the "kernel internal" API.

Linux API

The Linux API is composed out of the System Call Interface of the Linux kernel, the GNU C Library (by GNU), libcgroup,[1] libdrm, libalsa and libevdev[2] (by freedesktop.org).

The Linux API is the kerneluser space API, which allows programs in user space to access system resources and services of the Linux kernel.[3] It is composed out of the System Call Interface of the Linux kernel and the subroutines in the GNU C Library (glibc). The focus of the development of the Linux API has been to provide the usable features of the specifications defined in POSIX in a way which is reasonably compatible, robust and performant, and to provide additional useful features not defined in POSIX, just as the kerneluser space APIs of other systems implementing the POSIX API also provide additional features not defined in POSIX.

The Linux API, by choice, has been kept stable over the decades and never breaks; this stability guarantees the portability of source code.[4] At the same time, Linux kernel developers have historically been conservative and meticulous about introducing new system calls.

Much available free and open-source software is written for the POSIX API. Since so much more development flows into the Linux kernel as compared to the other POSIX-compliant combinations of kernel and C standard library, the Linux kernel and its API have been augmented with additional features. As far as these additional features provide a technical advantage, programming for the Linux API is preferred over the POSIX-API. Well-known current examples are udev, systemd and Weston.[5] People such as Lennart Poettering openly advocate to prefer the Linux API over the POSIX API, where this offers advantages.[6]

At FOSDEM 2016, Michael Kerrisk explained some of the perceived issues with the Linux kernel's user-space API, describing that it contains multiple design errors by being non-extensibe, unmaintainable, overly complex, of limited purpose, in violation of standards, and inconsistent. Most of those mistakes cannot be fixed because doing so would break the ABI that the kernel presents to the user space.[7]

System Call Interface of the Linux kernel

System Call Interface is the denomination for the entirety of all implemented and available system calls in a kernel. Various subsystems, such as e.g. the DRM define their own system calls and the entirety is called System Call Interface.

Various issues with the organization of the Linux kernel system calls are being publicly discussed. Issues have been pointed out by Andy Lutomirski, Michael Kerrisk and others.[8][9][10][11]

The C standard library

The GNU C Library is a wrapper around the Linux kernel System Call Interface.

The GNU C Library is a wrapper around the system calls of the Linux kernel; the combination of the Linux kernel System Call Interface and glibc is what builds the Linux API.

Additions to POSIX

As in other Unix-like systems, additional capabilities of the Linux kernel exist that are not part of POSIX:

DRM has been paramount for the development and implementations of well-defined and performant free and open-source graphics device drivers without which no rendering acceleration would be available at all, or even worse, only the 2D drivers would be available in the X.Org Server. DRM was developed for Linux, and since has been ported to other operating systems as well.[14]

Linux ABI

The Linux API and the Linux ABI
A long-term stable cross-distribution Linux ABI is NOT the responsibility of the developers, but of the Linux distributors! Such an ABI is only interesting for vendors of proprietary software and end-users interested in the purchase of such.
Main articles: x32 ABI and Linux Standard Base

The term Linux ABI refers to a kernel–user space ABI. The Application binary interface refers to the compiled binaries, in machine code. Any such ABI is therefore bound to the instruction set. Defining a useful ABI and keeping it stable is less the responsibility of the Linux kernel developers or of the developers of the GNU C Library, and more the task for Linux distributions and Independent software vendor (ISVs) who wish to sell and provide support for their proprietary software as binaries only for such a single Linux ABI, as opposed to supporting multiple Linux ABIs.

In the Wikipedia a category is maintained for articles on Category:Proprietary software for Linux.

An ABI has to be defined for every instruction set, such as x86, x86-64, MIPS, ARMv7-A (32-Bit), ARMv8-A (64-Bit), etc. with the endianness, if both are supported.

It should be able to compile the software with different compilers against the definitions specified in the ABI and achieve full binary compatibility. Compilers that are free and open-source software are e.g. GNU Compiler Collection, LLVM/Clang.

End-users are in fact not all interested in the Linux API (or the Windows API), but in the ABIs.

In–kernel APIs

There are a lot of kernel-internal APIs for all the subsystems to interface with one another. These are being kept fairly stable, but there is no guarantee for stability. In case new research or insights make a change seem favorable, an API is changed, all necessary rewrite and testing have to be done by the author.

The Linux kernel is a monolithic kernel, hence device drivers are kernel components. To ease the burden of companies maintaining their (proprietary) device drivers out-of-tree, stable APIs for the device drivers have been repeatedly requested. The Linux kernel developers have repeatedly denied guaranteeing stable in-kernel APIs for device drivers. Guaranteeing such would have faltered the development of the Linux kernel in the past and would still in the future and, due to the nature of free and open-source software, are not necessary! Ergo, by choice, the Linux kernel has no stable in-kernel API.[15]

In–kernel ABIs

Since there are no stable in–kernel APIs, there cannot be stable in–kernel ABIs.

See also

References

  1. 1 2 "ControlGroupInterface". freedesktop.org.
  2. "libevdev". freedesktop.org.
  3. Alessandro Rubini (2006-11-02). "Kernel System Calls". linux.it. Retrieved 2014-11-11.
  4. Linus Torvalds (2012-12-23). "Re: [Regression w/ patch] Media commit causes user space to misbahave (was: Re: Linux 3.8-rc1)". Linux kernel mailing list. Retrieved 2014-08-26. If a change results in user programs breaking, it's a bug in the kernel. We never EVER blame the user programs.
  5. "Choosing between portability and innovation". LWN.net. 2011-03-02.
  6. "Interview: Lennart Poettering - Lennart Poettering will give a talk about "Systemd: beyond init" at FOSDEM 2011.". fosdem.org. 2011. Retrieved 2014-06-16. In fact, the way I see things the Linux API has been taking the role of the POSIX API and Linux is the focal point of all Free Software development. Due to that I can only recommend developers to try to hack with only Linux in mind and experience the freedom and the opportunities this offers you. So, get yourself a copy of The Linux Programming Interface, ignore everything it says about POSIX compatibility and hack away your amazing Linux software. It's quite relieving!
  7. Michael Kerrisk (2016-01-31). "How to design a Linux kernel API". Retrieved 2016-02-04.
  8. "System Call Organization".
  9. "Making a universal list of syscalls?". LKML. 2014-02-27.
  10. "Flags as a system call API design pattern". LWN.net. 2014-02-12.
  11. "On vsyscalls and the vDSO". LWN.net. 2011-06-08.
  12. "[PATCH, RFC] random: introduce getrandom(2) system call". LKML. 2014-07-17.
  13. "memfd.c".
  14. "NetBSD 7.0 Will Finally Have DRM/KMS Drivers". Phoronix. 2014-03-19.
  15. "The Linux Kernel Driver Interface".

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Thursday, February 04, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.