On Thu, Nov 18, 2021 at 4:50 PM Andy Shevchenko andriy.shevchenko@linux.intel.com wrote:
On Thu, Nov 18, 2021 at 03:51:38PM +0100, Bartosz Golaszewski wrote:
This is another shot at the gpio-sim testing module. As there was no reasoning with configfs maintainers for many months, this time the whole concept of committable items has been dropped. Instead, each configfs chip item (or rather a group - more on that later) exposes a new attribute called 'live'. Writing 1 to it brings the chip on-line (registers the platform device) and writing 0 tears it down.
There are some caveats to that approach - for example: we can't block the user-space from deleting chip items when chips are live but is just handled by silently destroying the chip device in the background.
Andy (rightfully) pointed out that parsing of the lists of line names is awkward so in this iteration it's been replaced by a system that is more elegant and will allow to easily extend configuration options for specific GPIO lines. This is achieved by turning the chip's configfs item into a configfs group and allowing the user-space to create additional items inside it. The items must be called line<offset> (e.g. line0, line12 etc.) where the offset part indicates to the module the offset for which given item stores the configuration for. Within each such line item, there are additional attributes that allow specifying configuration for specific lines. Currently we only support the 'name' attribute but I plan to extend that to support GPIO hogging too.
One question here. Since you know how the driver looks like in both cases (with and without committable items), would it be possible to modify what you proposed here to the former one in case ConfigFS gains the feature?
This would completely change the user interface unfortunately. We could extend it but we would need to keep this one too most likely.
TBH I don't see the committable items merged anytime soon, and this is GoodEnough®.
Bart