On 2023/5/22 16:29, Sui Jingfeng wrote:
On 2023/5/22 16:09, WANG Xuerui wrote:
On 2023/5/22 16:02, Sui Jingfeng wrote:
Hi,
On 2023/5/21 20:21, WANG Xuerui wrote:
--- /dev/null +++ b/drivers/gpu/drm/loongson/Kconfig @@ -0,0 +1,17 @@ +# SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0
+config DRM_LOONGSON + tristate "DRM support for Loongson Graphics" + depends on DRM && PCI && MMU + select DRM_KMS_HELPER + select DRM_TTM + select I2C + select I2C_ALGOBIT + help + This is a DRM driver for Loongson Graphics, it may including + LS7A2000, LS7A1000, LS2K2000 and LS2K1000 etc. Loongson LS7A + series are bridge chipset, while Loongson LS2K series are SoC.
+ If "M" is selected, the module will be called loongson.
Just "loongson"?
Yes, when compile this driver as module, loongson.ko will be generated.
drm radeon is also doing so, See drm/radeon/Kconfig.
I know it's like this for ages (at least dating back to the MIPS days) but you really don't want to imply Loongson is mainly a GPU company. Something like "loongson_drm" or "lsdc" or "gsgpu" could be better.
No, these name may have backward compatibility problems.
Downstream driver already taken those name.
userspace driver need to differentiate them who is who.
IMO this shouldn't be a problem. Let me try explaining this: currently, upstream / the "new world" doesn't have any support for this driver at all, so any name will work; just use whatever is appropriate from an upstream's perspective, then make the userspace bits recognize both variants, and you'll be fine. And the "existing" userspace drivers can also carry the change, it'll just be a branch never taken in that setup.
So, I'm still in favor of keeping the upstream "clean" without dubious names like this (bare "loongson"). What do you think about my suggestion above?
No,
there is a 'arm' folder in the drivers/gpu/drm/, It doesn't say that arm is a pure gpu company.
there is a 'ingenic' folder in the drivers/gpu/drm/, ingenic also have their own custom CPUs.
there is a 'amd' folder in the drivers/gpu/drm/, these doesn't imply amd is mainly a GPU company.
when a folder emerged in drm/, it stand for the GPU related part of this company.
What you said is correct, but I'm referring to the module name, instead of the directory name. For example the AMD GPU driver is called "amdgpu", not "amd"; similarly, the Ingenic DRM driver is called "ingenic-drm", not "ingenic".