mess revision 1.2 1 $NetBSD: mess,v 1.2 2017/01/14 20:50:15 dholland Exp $
2
3 NetBSD Messes and Tentacular Horrors Roadmap
4 ============================================
5
6 There are a number of places in NetBSD where the code is substandard,
7 or messy, or badly structured, or just excessively complicated. These
8 are liabilities. Fixing them is a goal, not just because they
9 themselves cause problems but because every pile of glop in the system
10 functions as an implicit excuse to not clean up others.
11
12 There are two kinds of these messes: with some, the consequences are
13 relatively localized, and while dealing with that particular area of
14 the code may be nasty the issues are otherwise mostly not visible.
15 With others, the horror spreads and contaminates everything that comes
16 near it. The latter are particularly important to clean out.
17
18 The things listed here are listed here because they have been cited as
19 problems; some of these are regularly cited as problems. The goal of
20 this file is not to criticize the code or point fingers (some of these
21 messes come down to us all the way from 4.3 and are the result of
22 always patching and never fixing; but some of them have been
23 self-inflicted because they seemed like a good idea at the time, or
24 they were what we had, or whatever) but to document areas that could
25 use a good rototill or two.
26
27 These are listed in a perceived order of priority based on how bad the
28 mess is, how toxic it is to things around it, how much it's
29 interfering with other development, and how unreliable the affected
30 code is as a result.
31
32 1. namei, ufs_lookup, vfs_rename
33 2. buffercache
34 3. network interfaces
35 4. mbufs
36 5. tty code
37 6. nsswitch code in libc
38 7. proplib
39 8. kauth
40 9. sysmon_envsys
41 10. atf
42 11. pam
43
44
45 Explanations
46 ============
47
48
49 1. namei, ufs_lookup, vfs_rename
50
51 namei is central to everything and it's been horrible since at least
52 4.3 and maybe longer. A fair amount of work has been put into it, and
53 a number of the particular horrors have been eliminated, but there's
54 still quite a bit left to do.
55
56 The immediate next step is to introduce VOP_PARSEPATH (a new VOP call
57 to allow the two filesystems we have that consume more than one
58 directory component at a time to do so in a more tractable way) and
59 then it's time to start implementing namei_parent, a version that
60 stops at the parent with one component name left to go. This will
61 allow a much saner interface to directory ops, including rename, and
62 once those are done a lot of the complexity currently in namei and in
63 the VOP_LOOKUP interface can be removed.
64
65 - dholland is working on this intermittently.
66 - VOP_PARSEPATH is ready to commit and is expected to make 8.0.
67 There is currently no clear timeframe for anything beyond that.
68 - Responsible: dholland
69
70
71 2. buffercache
72
73 The buffercache code is messy and full of flag words that filesystems
74 muck with freely and not necessarily with correct locking. It is
75 suspected that there is a lot of incorrect locking. Also, a lot of the
76 naming and terminology (things like BO_DELWRI) is really ancient and
77 reflects non-current assumptions about the way file system buffers
78 should work.
79
80 The first step on this is to disentangle the buffer cache
81 (buffercache(9)) from the buffer I/O path (bufferio(9)) -- right now
82 they both abusively share the same struct buf.
83
84 - As of January 2017 nobody is currently working on this.
85 - There is currently no clear timeframe or release target.
86 - Contact dholland for further information.
87
88
89 3. network interfaces
90
91 The network interface structure and its associated support code has no
92 abstraction, no encapsulation, and no safety. It badly needs
93 rationalization.
94
95 - As of January 2017 nobody is currently working on this directly,
96 though some aspects fall under the multiprocessor network stack
97 project.
98 - There is currently no clear timeframe or release target.
99 - Contact rmind for further information.
100
101
102 4. mbufs
103
104 The mbuf code has some concept of an interface, but lots of the code
105 manipulating mbufs doesn't use that interface, and there's still no
106 encapsulation and no safety.
107
108 - As of January 2017 nobody is currently working on this directly,
109 though some aspects fall under the multiprocessor network stack
110 project.
111 - There is currently no clear timeframe or release target.
112 - Contact rmind or dholland for further information.
113
114
115 5. tty code
116
117 The tty subsystem has no concept of an interface at all, and there are
118 large wodges of code cutpasted all over everywhere in gazillions of
119 tty client drivers. There's no encapsulation either and absolutely no
120 safety. Furthermore the locking model is bodgy.
121
122 In addition to this the division of responsibility between "tty" and
123 "serial port" is wrong. There are a number of drivers (e.g. for mice)
124 that are partially ttys because they're things that are more or less
125 serial ports, but they were never meant to be used for logins and
126 can't be. These should be disentangled from the tty layer.
127
128 Finally, the notion of line disciplines is a legacy mess that ought to
129 get turned into a system of device attachments - a line discipline is
130 a driver attached on top of the line, except that the concept appeared
131 long before anyone really thought up device attachments as we know
132 them now.
133
134 - As of January 2017 nobody is currently working on this.
135 - There is currently no clear timeframe or release target.
136 - Contact dholland for further information.
137
138
139 6. nsswitch code in libc
140
141 The nsswitch code in libc is not all that bad in the sense of being
142 horrible code you lose sanity points to look at, but it's structured
143 all wrong. It can't be cleaned up without doing a libc bump, which is
144 a big deal, but if we do ever manage to get that libc bump done it's
145 important that the nsswitch code get revised then.
146
147 - As of January 2017 nobody is currently working on this.
148 - There is currently no clear timeframe or release target.
149 - Contact dholland or joerg for further information.
150
151
152 7. proplib
153
154 Removal of proplib is and has been a goal of several developers for
155 some time, but there's not been any consensus on a replacement. Much
156 has been written on this elsewhere so I'm not going to repeat it all
157 here.
158
159 - As of January 2017 nobody is currently working on this, but several
160 partly-finished proplib replacement candidates exist.
161 - There is currently no clear timeframe or release target.
162 - Contact dholland, rmind, riastradh, or any of a number of other
163 people for further information.
164
165
166 8. kauth
167
168 kauth is far too complicated for security code and its API is full of
169 void pointers and horribly unsafe. There is no consensus on what to do
170 about it, though. Part of the problem is that kauth itself is at least
171 three different things that need to be disentangled: (a) an API for
172 random kernel code to issue security checks; (b) an implementation of
173 security check logic; and (c) an extensibility framework for that
174 security check logic.
175
176 - As of January 2017 nobody is currently working on this.
177 - There is currently no clear timeframe or release target.
178 - Contact dholland for further information.
179
180
181 9. sysmon_envsys
182
183 sysmon_envsys is also too complicated. XXX: someone fill in more here
184 please.
185
186 - As of January 2017 nobody is currently working on this.
187 - There is currently no clear timeframe or release target.
188 - Contact: ? (XXX)
189
190
191 10. atf
192
193 atf is horribly complicated and very expensive (apparently it takes
194 all day to compile just atf on an sgimips) and doesn't provide a whole
195 lot of bang for the buck. It is also frequently cited as an impediment
196 to getting new tests written and deployed. It is not at all clear what
197 to do about it.
198
199 - As of January 2017 nobody is currently working on this.
200 - There is currently no clear timeframe or release target.
201 - Contact: ? (XXX)
202
203
204 11. pam
205
206 pam, though a more or less standard API/interface, has a range of
207 problems, one being that after the manner of sysvinit it works by
208 exposing a mechanism and you configure it by mucking with the
209 mechanism until it produces the behavior you want. (Except that if you
210 muck with its mechanism, you end up locking yourself out.) In practice
211 editing pam configs seems to be limited to specialists, and that's
212 really not suitable for security software.
213
214 It is very unclear what to do about it though. It's a standard API and
215 there are a number of 3rd-party pam modules, some of which people need
216 to be able to use. Once upon a time there was a similar thing called
217 bsdauth, but it never really seems to have been a credible alternative.
218 Probably the right thing to do is to completely redesign
219 how logging in works, but that's a Big Deal.
220
221 - As of January 2017 nobody is currently working on this.
222 - There is currently no clear timeframe or release target.
223 - Contact: ? (XXX)
224