Re: [PATCH 0/4] drivers/misc: add rawio framework and drivers

From: Bin Gao
Date: Tue Oct 22 2013 - 14:22:17 EST


On Tue, Oct 22, 2013 at 06:44:06AM +0100, Greg Kroah-Hartman wrote:
> So, just because userspace is "hard" you want to add stuff to the kernel
> instead.
>
Well, there are other reasons - "hard" is just one of them.
For instance, on some platforms with runtime pm enabled, access to registers
of a device which is in low power state will cause problems(syste reboot, etc.).
You can only wake it up to running state by runtime API from kernel space.

> Sorry, but for over the past decade, we have been doing just the
> opposite, if things can be done in userspace, then they should be done
> there. So for us to go in the opposite direction, like these patches
> show, would be a major change.
>
Agree, but as mentioned above, for some situation we can't do it from
user space.

> You can already do this today for PCI with the UIO framework, right?
> Why duplicate that functionality here with another userapce API that we
> will then have to maintain for the next 40+ years?
>
No, UIO is not appropriate for my requirement.
The thing I need is to dump any registers just by 2 simple commands.

> All of your patches are line-wrapped and totally fail to apply, so even
> if we wanted to take this type of changes, I couldn't :(
>
Sorry for that. I recently upgraded my email client, will fix it next posting.

> Have you run these proposed changes by any of the Intel kernel
> developers? What did they say to them?
>
> If not, why haven't you, isn't that a resource you should be using for
> things like this?
>
Why you had these strange questions?
Over years, we have been maintaining and using these drivers internally
for various purpose across our group for SoC pre-silicon and post-silicon
degugging, e.g. IOAPIC RTE dumping, GPIO tunning, raw device degugging
without a driver(i2c, spi, uart), etc., etc., ...
Trying to push some existed codes upstream is not a bad thing.

> greg k-h
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