Re: [GIT PULL 5/9] intel_th: msu: Introduce buffer driver interface
From: Greg Kroah-Hartman
Date: Wed Jul 03 2019 - 12:49:21 EST
On Wed, Jul 03, 2019 at 07:33:58PM +0300, Alexander Shishkin wrote:
> Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> writes:
>
> >> + /*
> >> + * ->assign() called when buffer 'mode' is set to this driver
> >> + * (aka mode_store())
> >> + * @device: struct device * of the msc
> >> + * @mode: allows the driver to set HW mode (see the enum above)
> >> + * Returns: a pointer to a private structure associated with this
> >> + * msc or NULL in case of error. This private structure
> >> + * will then be passed into all other callbacks.
> >> + */
> >> + void *(*assign)(struct device *dev, int *mode);
> >> + /* ->unassign(): some other mode is selected, clean up */
> >> + void (*unassign)(void *priv);
> >> + /*
> >> + * ->alloc_window(): allocate memory for the window of a given
> >> + * size
> >> + * @sgt: pointer to sg_table, can be overridden by the buffer
> >> + * driver, or kept intact
> >> + * Returns: number of sg table entries <= number of pages;
> >> + * 0 is treated as an allocation failure.
> >> + */
> >> + int (*alloc_window)(void *priv, struct sg_table **sgt,
> >> + size_t size);
> >> + void (*free_window)(void *priv, struct sg_table *sgt);
> >> + /* ->activate(): trace has started */
> >> + void (*activate)(void *priv);
> >> + /* ->deactivate(): trace is about to stop */
> >> + void (*deactivate)(void *priv);
> >> + /*
> >> + * ->ready(): window @sgt is filled up to the last block OR
> >> + * tracing is stopped by the user; this window contains
> >> + * @bytes data. The window in question transitions into
> >> + * the "LOCKED" state, indicating that it can't be used
> >> + * by hardware. To clear this state and make the window
> >> + * available to the hardware again, call
> >> + * intel_th_msc_window_unlock().
> >> + */
> >> + int (*ready)(void *priv, struct sg_table *sgt, size_t bytes);
> >> +};
> >
> > Why isn't this based off of 'struct driver'?
>
> It's not a real driver, in a sense that there's no underlying
> device. None of the usual driver stuff applies.
Then do not call it a "driver", as in the kernel we have a very
well-defined and known definition of a driver. Call it something else
please. Yes, naming is hard, but don't try to overload onto an already
existing name.
> It's still a set of callbacks, though. Should this be an elaborate
> comment, should I replace the word "driver" with something else?
Yes.
> I'd really like to avoid shoehorning the whole 'struct device' +
> 'struct driver' here.
Why not? If you have a driver, just make it a real one. It not take
all that much boiler-plate code to do so and then you get all of the
things you will want in the end anyway (sysfs representation,
attributes, auto-loading of modules, etc.)
Try doing it "for real" and see what happens.
thanks,
greg k-h