Re: [PATCH] USB: add USB test and measurement class driver - round2

From: Greg KH
Date: Fri Aug 29 2008 - 23:50:47 EST


On Fri, Aug 29, 2008 at 06:41:15PM +0200, Marcel Janssen wrote:
> On Friday 29 August 2008 16:39:02 Greg KH wrote:
> > > The issue with using cat on the shell level is that it uses fread
> > > which has the (in this case) ugly behaviour of recalling the driver's
> > > read method until the full number of characters requested has been
> > > accumulated (or until zero characters are returned, indicating the end
> > > of file). With USBTMC instruments, this behavour is bad because the
> > > retry will not just return zero characters, it will cause a timeout
> > > with the associated error condition in the device. So, to enable the
> > > use of echo/cat, I added some fread handling to the driver (which
> > > catches the retries). I believe this also has been removed, so I
> > > assume cat/fread will not work (?).
> >
> > I do not know, but we do not do wierd things in the kernel just because
> > of broken userspace programs. This logic should be done in userspace,
> > and programs should look at the return value of read() and handle it
> > properly. Otherwise it is a bug.
>
> I don't think this is broken in user space. The problem is that when you issue
> a measurement command it is not known how many bytes it will return. This is
> probably due to ASCII output being very common in T&M devices instead of raw
> data (int, float etc). The ASCII formatting is done in the device and this
> returns just a string which may or may not be terminated by the term char.
> This is of course not true for all T&M devices, but the majority works this
> way.
>
> I admit that the above produces a lot of overhead, but it's just a fact that
> T&M devices work this way, including ours for most of their data processing
> (not all though).

How is this overhead in userspace, just do something like the following:
char big_buffer[16000]; /* bigger than any possible request */
size = read(file_desc, &big_buffer[0], sizeof(big_buffer));

and size is the amount of data you actually read from the device, i.e.
one request.

> I think the USBTMC spec is quite clear on how it should be implemented on
> messaging level. Basically when you issue the command "*IDN?" the device
> will process this and return the device ID string. The length of this string
> is set in the TransferSize of the 12 byte header that the device returns. The
> problem when you issue a read command is that the read command does not yet
> know how much data to expect. It should issue the REQUEST_DEV_DEP_MSG_IN
> first and set the TransferSize value high enough.
> In the USBTMC_488 extension you find an example (chapter 3.3.1 page 7) that
> shows the REQUEST_DEV_DEP_MSG_IN TransferSize being set to 64 although the
> actual data being returned from the device is less (only 36 bytes).
>
> What you do see in practice is that when someone would issue a read command
> and asking for less bytes than are available is that the user program may
> handle this as a warning telling the user that he did not request all
> available data.

Then that's a userspace bug, don't do that in your program that reads
from these types of devices :)

> Stefan's driver works exactly the way I would expect from a users point of
> view. Whether the implementation can be improved is another issue, but the
> behaviour is correct and compliant with other usbtmc drivers on other
> platforms.

But it's not compliant with the "standard" way of using a file
descriptor in unix, and might break some POSIX requirements as well (I'm
not a good POSIX follower, so I don't know for sure...)

As this is trivial to handle in userspace, and requires no additional
wierd code in the kernel driver, I don't see this as something we should
change the driver for.

thanks,

greg k-h
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