Re: [PATCH 0/6] tagged sysfs support

From: Ben Hutchings
Date: Sat Apr 03 2010 - 12:06:59 EST


On Sat, 2010-04-03 at 10:35 +0200, Kay Sievers wrote:
> On Sat, Apr 3, 2010 at 02:58, Ben Hutchings <ben@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
> > On Wed, 2010-03-31 at 07:51 +0200, Kay Sievers wrote:
> >> Yeah, /sys/bus/, which is the only sane layout of the needlessly
> >> different 3 versions of the same thing (bus, class, block).
> > [...]
> >
> > block vs class/block is arguable,
>
> That's already done long ago.
>
> > but as for abstracting the difference
> > between bus and class... why?
>
> There is absolutely no need to needlessly export two versions of the
> same thing. These directories serve no other purpose than to collect
> all devices of the same subsystem. There is no useful information that
> belongs to the type class or bus, they are both the same. Like
> "inputX" is implemented as a class, but is much more like a bus.

Really, how do you enumerate 'input' buses?

> And "usb" are devices, which are more a class of devices, and the
> interfaces and contollers belong to a bus.

What common higher-level functionality do USB devices provide?

> There is really no point to make userspace needlessly complicated to
> distinguish the both.
>
> We also have already a buch of subsystems which moved from class to
> bus because they needed to express hierarchy between the same devices.
> So the goal is to have only one type of subsystem to solve these
> problems.

That's interesting. Which were those?

[...]
> > So while buses and classes both define device interfaces, they are
> > fundamentally different types of interface.
>
> No, they are not. They are just "devices". There is no useful
> difference these two different types expose. And the class layout is
> fundamentally broken, and not extendable. Peole mix lists of devices
> with custom subsystem-wide attributes, which we need to stop from
> doing this. The bus layout can carry custom directories, which is why
> we want that by default for all "classifications".
[...]

I understand that you want to clean up a mess, but how do you know
you're not going to break user-space that depends on some of this mess?

Ben.

--
Ben Hutchings
Once a job is fouled up, anything done to improve it makes it worse.

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