On Fri, 2 Sep 2016, Jacek Anaszewski wrote:
I'm pretty sure noone ever planned to have more than 1 trigger
assigned to a single LED. I just realized there will be a problem with
proposed solution: sysfs files conflict.
...
Currently we support only triggers dedicated to specific type of
devices. Even in case of triggers that don't expose custom sysfs
attributes, registered with led_trigger_register_simple(), device
drivers have to generate trigger event with dedicated function, e.g:
- ledtrig-cpu: void ledtrig_cpu(enum cpu_led_event ledevt)
- ledtrig-disk: void ledtrig_disk_activity(void)
- ledtrig-mtd: void ledtrig_mtd_activity(void)
If one wanted to have the LED notified by different type of devices,
then they would have to implement a trigger that would exposed all
required types of API.
Unfortunately, there are many possible combinations of
triggers and that doesn't sound sane to add a new one when someone
will find it useful. Of course it would entail adding a call to the
new trigger API in the drivers, which doesn't seem like something
acceptable in the mainline.
Maybe it would make more sense, in this case, to allow only three
possibilities for a USB port activity trigger. Toggle the LED
whenever:
There is activity on the specified port, or
There is any activity on any port on the specified hub, or
There is any USB activity on any port.
That ought to cover most of the normal use cases, and it would be
simple enough to implement.
What would be the benefit of having a USB port activity trigger,
for which we would be specifying the port to observe, but in the same
time we would react on any activity on any port (cases 1 and 3)?
I meant these three cases to be mutually exclusive. For a given LED,
you could have only one of those trigger types (like mentioned above,
only one trigger per LED). For example, you might accept any one of:
echo usb1-4.2 >/sys/class/led/foo/trigger
echo hub1-4 >/sys/class/led/foo/trigger
echo usb >/sys/class/led/foo/trigger
Yes, it would be possible to have a port-specific trigger for one LED
and an overall USB activity trigger for another LED. I don't know how
useful this would be -- you could probably imagine some unlikely
scenario.
The point is that doing things this way wouldn't require any API
violations, and it would allow users to do almost all of the things
they are likely to want.