Re: [PATCH v12 11/17] docs: counter: Document character device interface
From: William Breathitt Gray
Date: Sun Jul 11 2021 - 06:41:26 EST
On Sat, Jul 10, 2021 at 03:15:06PM -0500, David Lechner wrote:
> On 7/5/21 3:18 AM, William Breathitt Gray wrote:
> > This patch adds high-level documentation about the Counter subsystem
> > character device interface.
> >
> > Signed-off-by: William Breathitt Gray <vilhelm.gray@xxxxxxxxx>
> > ---
> > Documentation/driver-api/generic-counter.rst | 185 ++++++++++++++----
> > .../userspace-api/ioctl/ioctl-number.rst | 1 +
> > 2 files changed, 145 insertions(+), 41 deletions(-)
> >
> > diff --git a/Documentation/driver-api/generic-counter.rst b/Documentation/driver-api/generic-counter.rst
> > index f6397218aa4c..62a702e7f994 100644
> > --- a/Documentation/driver-api/generic-counter.rst
> > +++ b/Documentation/driver-api/generic-counter.rst
>
>
> > +
> > +Counter Character Device
> > +========================
> > +
> > +Counter character device nodes are created under the ``/dev`` directory
> > +as ``counterX``, where ``X`` is the respective counter device id.
> > +Defines for the standard Counter data types are exposed via the
> > +userspace ``include/uapi/linux/counter.h`` file.
> > +
> > +Counter events
> > +--------------
> > +Counter device drivers can support Counter events by utilizing the
> > +``counter_push_event`` function::
> > +
> > + void counter_push_event(struct counter_device *const counter, const u8 event,
> > + const u8 channel);
> > +
> > +The event id is specified by the ``event`` parameter; the event channel
> > +id is specified by the ``channel`` parameter. When this function is
> > +called, the Counter data associated with the respective event is
> > +gathered, and a ``struct counter_event`` is generated for each datum and
> > +pushed to userspace.
> > +
> > +Counter events can be configured by users to report various Counter
> > +data of interest. This can be conceptualized as a list of Counter
> > +component read calls to perform. For example::
>
> Won't the :: here make this appear as text instead of an HTML table?
>
> (might need to change ~~~ to --- [top line] and === [middle line])
Ack, I'll change this to an HTML table.
> > +
> > + +~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~+~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~+
> > + | COUNTER_EVENT_OVERFLOW | COUNTER_EVENT_INDEX |
> > + +~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~+~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~+
> > + | Channel 0 | Channel 0 |
> > + +------------------------+------------------------+
> > + | * Count 0 | * Signal 0 |
> > + | * Count 1 | * Signal 0 Extension 0 |
> > + | * Signal 3 | * Extension 4 |
> > + | * Count 4 Extension 2 +------------------------+
> > + | * Signal 5 Extension 0 | Channel 1 |
> > + | +------------------------+
> > + | | * Signal 4 |
> > + | | * Signal 4 Extension 0 |
> > + | | * Count 7 |
> > + +------------------------+------------------------+
> > +
> > +When ``counter_push_event(counter, COUNTER_EVENT_INDEX, 1)`` is called
> > +for example, it will go down the list for the ``COUNTER_EVENT_INDEX``
> > +event channel 1 and execute the read callbacks for Signal 4, Signal 4
> > +Extension 0, and Count 4 -- the data returned for each is pushed to a
> > +kfifo as a ``struct counter_event``, which userspace can retrieve via a
> > +standard read operation on the respective character device node.
> > +
> > +Userspace
> > +---------
> > +Userspace applications can configure Counter events via ioctl operations
> > +on the Counter character device node. There following ioctl codes are
> > +supported and provided by the ``linux/counter.h`` userspace header file:
> > +
> > +* COUNTER_ADD_WATCH_IOCTL:
> > + Queues a Counter watch for the specified event. The queued watches
> > + will not be applied until ``COUNTER_ENABLE_EVENTS_IOCTL`` is called.
> > +
> > +* COUNTER_ENABLE_EVENTS_IOCTL:
> > + Enables monitoring the events specified by the Counter watches that
> > + were queued by ``COUNTER_ADD_WATCH_IOCTL``. If events are already
> > + enabled, the new set of watches replaces the old one. Calling this
> > + ioctl also has the effect of clearing the queue of watches added by
> > + ``COUNTER_ADD_WATCH_IOCTL``.
> > +
> > +* COUNTER_DISABLE_EVENTS_IOCTL:
> > + Stops monitoring the previously enabled events.
>
> I wouldn't mind seeing more of this documentation in the actual header
> file and just referenced here with :c:macro:`COUNTER_ADD_WATCH_IOCTL`
Ack.
> > +
> > +To configure events to gather Counter data, users first populate a
> > +``struct counter_watch`` with the relevant event id, event channel id,
> > +and the information for the desired Counter component from which to
> > +read, and then pass it via the ``COUNTER_ADD_WATCH_IOCTL`` ioctl
> > +command.
> > +
> > +Note that an event can be watched without gathering Counter data by
> > +setting the ``component.type`` member equal to
> > +``COUNTER_COMPONENT_NONE``. With this configuration the Counter
> > +character device will simply populate the event timestamps for those
> > +respective ``struct counter_event`` elements and ignore the component
> > +value.
>
> To make sure I am understanding this correctly, scope + parent
> determines this part of the path:
>
> /sys/.../counterX/<scope><parent>/<component>
>
> Or in the case that scope == COUNTER_SCOPE_DEVICE then parent
> is not applicable:
>
> /sys/.../counterX/<component>
Yes, that understanding is correct.
> I suggested parent_id instead of parent earlier, but maybe
> scope_id would be a better name? (Or rename scope to parent_type?)
I can see the benefit of more specific naming, but perhaps the current
names are clear enough when they appear in the context of user code. It
becomes rather obvious in a snippet of code that `component.scope`
refers to the scope type of a component while `component.parent` refers
to the specific parent of the component; I don't think the more verbose
`scope_type`/`parent_type` or `scope_id`/`parent_id` namings really add
much benefit here.
I'm not entirely opposed to renaming this, so if other maintainers also
feel this is better renamed then I'll change it. If we do change the
naming, then remaing `scope` to `scope_type` and `parent` to `parent_id`
might be the way to go; "scope_id" seems strange to me because I
envision `scope` as a type rather than an identifiable component.
William Breathitt Gray
Attachment:
signature.asc
Description: PGP signature