Re: [PATCH 1/3] iio: light: Add driver for ap3216c

From: Sven Van Asbroeck
Date: Mon Feb 11 2019 - 17:30:32 EST


On Mon, Feb 11, 2019 at 4:27 PM Jonathan Cameron <jic23@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
>
> Agreed. Or potentially just use regmap_bulk_read and rely on
> the regmap internal locking to do it for you.

Neat solution. But it may only work correctly iff regmap_bulk_read()
reads the low
address first. I'm not sure if this function has that guarantee. If
somebody changes
the read order, the driver will break. But I think I'm being overly
paranoid here :)

> So yes, it's more than possible that userspace won't get the same number
> of events as samples taken over the limit, but I don't know why we care.
> We can about missing a threshold being passed entirely, not about knowing
> how many samples we were above it for.

I suspect that we run a small risk of losing an event, like so:

PS (12.5 ms)
--> interrupt -> iio event
ALS (100 ms)
--> interrupt -> iio event
PS (12.5 ms)
--> interrupt ========= no iio event generated
ALS (100 ms)
--> interrupt -> iio event

To see why, imagine that the scheduler decides to move away from the
threaded interrupt
handler right before ap3216c_clear_int(). Say 20ms, which I know is a
loooong time,
but bear with me, the point is that it _could_ happen as we're not a RTOS.

static irqreturn_t ap3216c_event_handler(int irq, void *p)
{
/* imagine ALS interrupt came in, INT_STATUS is 0b01 */
regmap_read(data->regmap, AP3216C_INT_STATUS, &status);
if (status & mask1) iio_push_event(PROX);
if (status & mask2) iio_push_event(LIGHT);

/* imagine schedule happens here */
msleep(20);
/* while we were not running, PS interrupt came in
INT_STATUS is now 0b11
yet no new interrupt is generated, as we are ONESHOT
*/
ap3216c_clear_int(data);
/* clears both bits, interrupt line goes low.
knowledge that the PS interrupt came in is now lost */
}

Not sure if that's acceptable driver behaviour. In real life it
probably wouldn't matter much,
except for occasional added latency maybe ?