Re: [RFC] What are the goals for the architecture of an in-kernelIR system?
From: Dmitry Torokhov
Date: Mon Dec 07 2009 - 23:23:53 EST
On Mon, Dec 07, 2009 at 09:44:14PM -0200, Mauro Carvalho Chehab wrote:
> Let me add my view for those questions.
>
> Jon Smirl wrote:
> > On Sun, Dec 6, 2009 at 3:34 PM, Krzysztof Halasa <khc@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:
> >> Jon Smirl <jonsmirl@xxxxxxxxx> writes:
> >>
> >>>> Once again: how about agreement about the LIRC interface
> >>>> (kernel-userspace) and merging the actual LIRC code first? In-kernel
> >>>> decoding can wait a bit, it doesn't change any kernel-user interface.
> >>> I'd like to see a semi-complete design for an in-kernel IR system
> >>> before anything is merged from any source.
> >> This is a way to nowhere, there is no logical dependency between LIRC
> >> and input layer IR.
> >>
> >> There is only one thing which needs attention before/when merging LIRC:
> >> the LIRC user-kernel interface. In-kernel "IR system" is irrelevant and,
> >> actually, making a correct IR core design without the LIRC merged can be
> >> only harder.
> >
> > Here's a few design review questions on the LIRC drivers that were posted....
> >
> > How is the pulse data going to be communicated to user space?
>
> lirc_dev will implement a revised version of the lirc API. I'm assuming that
> Jerod and Christoph will do this review, in order to be sure that it is stable
> enough for kernel inclusion (as proposed by Gerd).
>
> > Can the pulse data be reported via an existing interface without
> > creating a new one?
>
> Raw pulse data should be reported only via lirc_dev, but it can be converted
> into a keycode and reported via evdev as well, via an existing interface.
>
> > Where is the documentation for the protocol?
>
> I'm not sure what you're meaning here. I've started a doc about IR at the media
> docbook. This is currently inside the kernel Documents/DocBook. If you want
> to browse, it is also available as:
>
> http://linuxtv.org/downloads/v4l-dvb-apis/ch17.html
>
> For sure we need to better document the IR's, and explain the API's there.
>
> > Is it a device interface or something else?
>
> lirc_dev should create a device interface.
>
> > What about capabilities of the receiver, what frequencies?
> > If a receiver has multiple frequencies, how do you report what
> > frequency the data came in on?
>
> IMO, via sysfs.
We probably need to think what exactly we report through sysfs siunce it
is ABI of sorts.
>
> > What about multiple apps simultaneously using the pulse data?
>
> IMO, the better is to limit the raw interface to just one open.
>
Why woudl we want to do this? Quite often there is a need for "observer"
that maybe does not act on data but allows capturing it. Single-user
inetrfaces are PITA.
> > How big is the receive queue?
>
> It should be big enough to receive at least one keycode event. Considering that
> the driver will use kfifo (IMO, it is a good strategy, especially since you
> won't need any lock if just one open is allowed), it will require a power of two size.
>
Would not it be wither driver- or protocol-specific?
> > How does access work, root only or any user?
>
> IMO, it should be the same requirement as used by an input interface.
>
> > How are capabilities exposed, sysfs, etc?
>
> IMO, sysfs.
>
> > What is the interface for attaching an in-kernel decoder?
>
> IMO, it should use the kfifo for it. However, if we allow both raw data and
> in-kernel decoders to read data there, we'll need a spinlock to protect the
> kfifo.
>
I think Jon meant userspace interface for attaching particular decoder.
> > If there is an in-kernel decoder should the pulse data stop being
> > reported, partially stopped, something else?
>
> I don't have a strong opinion here, but, from the previous discussions, it
> seems that people want it to be double-reported by default. If so, I think
> we need to implement a command at the raw interface to allow disabling the
> in-kernel decoder, while the raw interface is kept open.
Why don't you simply let consumers decide where they will get their data?
>
> > What is the mechanism to make sure both system don't process the same pulses?
>
> I don't see a good way to avoid it.
>
> > Does it work with poll, epoll, etc?
> > What is the time standard for the data, where does it come from?
> > How do you define the start and stop of sequences?
> > Is receiving synchronous or queued?
> > What about transmit, how do you get pulse data into the device?
> > Transmitter frequencies?
> > Multiple transmitters?
> > Is transmitting synchronous or queued?
> > How big is the transmit queue?
>
> I don't have a clear answer for those. I'll let those to LIRC developers to answer.
>
--
Dmitry
--
To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-kernel" in
the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html
Please read the FAQ at http://www.tux.org/lkml/