Re: [linux-usb-devel] [RFC] HID bus design overview.

From: Dmitry Torokhov
Date: Fri Mar 30 2007 - 00:34:21 EST


On Thursday 29 March 2007 23:06, Li Yu wrote:
> Dmitry Torokhov wrote:
> > On 3/28/07, Jiri Kosina <jkosina@xxxxxxx> wrote:
> >>
> >> The crucial thing here is that all reports but the ones that the driver
> >> registered to will be processed in a standard way by the generic hid bus
> >> layer, and those reports that the driver registered to will be
> >> ignored by
> >> the layer, and passed for processing to the driver.
> >>
> >
> > I don't think it is a good idea to register driver for specific
> > usages/reports. Quite often you want to adjust processing of a report
> > for a specific device. What if there are 2 devices that need such
> > quirks? How will you do hotplug and module loading? Emit new uevent
> > for every report? Also, what about users and Kconfig? "Driver for
> > usage 0x000012345. Say Y if your hardware does not wotk correctly with
> > defautl handler for this usage and require special processing"???
> >
> > Just register based on VID/PID and provide standard
> > hid_default_input_event() to drivers so they would call it for reports
> > they don't need to do special processing on.
> >
>
> I think the shadow driver can not share inputdev with the related
> fundamental driver, so here are two input devices for one hid_device,
> how we should process both? It seem we have three choices:
>
> 1. Shadow | Fundamental means
>
> I think this is Jiri said. Fundamental driver handle all common
> input events, and Shadow driver handle anther specific input events,
> this imply user space process need monitor both input devices at same
> time, I do not think this is good idea.
>
> 2. Shadow & Fundamental means
>
> Let Fundamental driver and Shadow driver work at same time! but
> shadow also handle specific input event. So, the user may get twice
> input events! For example, the keyboard input in console.
> Also, I do not like this.
>
> 3. Shadow ^ Fundamental means
>
> Let Shadow driver handle every thing, and fundamental device silent,
> even unregister it. I think this is best choice between them, this means
> have a bit of complex.
>


There should be one device and your driver should simply do:

static void my_driver_hid_event(struct hid_device *hid, struct hid_field *field,
struct hid_usage *usage, __s32 value)
{
if (special_processing_needed(usage)) {
do_special_processing(...);
input_event(field->hidinput->input, XXX, YYY, ZZZ);
...

} else
hidinput_hid_event(hid, field, usage, value);
}

That is pretty much it. Your driver is not a shadow driver, it is
regular driver on HID bus that just happens to use generic hander
for standard events.

--
Dmitry
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