From: Henrik Rydberg <rydberg@euromail.se>
To: Ping Cheng <pinglinux@gmail.com>
Cc: "Dmitry Torokhov" <dmitry.torokhov@gmail.com>,
"Chris Bagwell" <chris@cnpbagwell.com>,
linux-input <linux-input@vger.kernel.org>,
"Stéphane Chatty" <chatty@enac.fr>,
"Rafi Rubin" <rafi@seas.upenn.edu>
Subject: Re: [PATCH 4/5] input: wacom: Add support for the Bamboo Touch trackpad (rev4)
Date: Mon, 01 Nov 2010 15:43:49 +0100 [thread overview]
Message-ID: <4CCED225.10508@euromail.se> (raw)
In-Reply-To: <AANLkTikcEjnWghuJGAe-JiUu2n0vfmE3vh7SzUpqK2tP@mail.gmail.com>
On 10/29/2010 10:45 PM, Ping Cheng wrote:
[...]
>>>
>>> Why do we need an arbitrary MAX_TRACKING_ID when the device can tell
>>> us how many IDs we can have and it tracks the individual fingers for
>>> us?
The emphasis is on unique, not on arbitrary. :-)
>>> In this case, there are only two ID/fingers and the ID can be
>>> retrieved from the raw data. I must be missing something in the
>>> defintion of MAX_TRACKING_ID.
>>
>> In the language of ABS_MT, there is a distinction between slot and id. The slot
>> is the handle used to communicate a unique touch. The id is the identifier of
>> that touch. The device tells us how many slots we have. The range of ids is in
>> principle infinite. In practice, it is set to a large number.
>
> Sorry to bring this topic back again. I was under the impression that
> I was the only one who didn't get the spec clear. The discussion at
> yesterday's UDS session made me feel I am not alone (good or bad :).
> Let me try it again to see if I can get it right this time.
>
> From the "Multi-touch (MT) Protocol" under Documentation/input, we see
> the following:
>
> "The slot protocol requires the use of the ABS_MT_TRACKING_ID, either
> provided by the hardware or computed from the raw data".
>
> That means if the hardware provides the tracking ID, we use it.
> Otherwise we lose that specific information reported from the
> hardware.
The recurring question is: what information is lost?
> For the Bamboo case, the tracking ID happens to be the same as the
> slot ID we use. But, there are devices, as far as I know, report up to
> 10 fingers/touches. So, there would be 10 slots to report the data.
> But, the tracking ID we get from the devices is 0 to 255. So, slot 5
> could have a tracking ID of 123 now and 9 when tuch 123 is up and
> touch 5 is down.
>
>> To answer a possible follow-up question: from the tracking id, you can tell if a
>> contact is present, if it is new, and if it is older than another contact.
>
> The new and old attribute can be tracked by a time stamp in the
> userland. Kernel driver doesn't need to worry about it. Maybe I am
> missing an use case in the kernel?
The kernel is the most long-lived process, and userspace programs may be
restarted many times over during the life cycle of a single boot. What happens
when we want to restart an application monitoring a large touch table, for instance?
Regardless of what applications and needs we will see in the future, I feel the
main argument put forward so far, that hardware information must be passed on
untouched at all costs, is more political than technical, and I would very much
like to stay out of such discussions.
Thanks,
Henrik
next prev parent reply other threads:[~2010-11-01 14:45 UTC|newest]
Thread overview: 19+ messages / expand[flat|nested] mbox.gz Atom feed top
2010-09-04 13:42 [PATCH 0/5] input: wacom: Initial support for Bamboo (rev3) Henrik Rydberg
2010-09-04 13:42 ` [PATCH 1/5] input: wacom: Add fuzz parameters to features Henrik Rydberg
2010-09-04 13:43 ` [PATCH 2/5] input: wacom: Parse the Bamboo device family Henrik Rydberg
2010-09-04 13:43 ` [PATCH 3/5] input: wacom: Collect device quirks into single function (rev2) Henrik Rydberg
2010-09-04 13:43 ` [PATCH 4/5] input: wacom: Add support for the Bamboo Touch trackpad (rev4) Henrik Rydberg
2010-09-05 10:04 ` Henrik Rydberg
2010-09-05 20:03 ` Dmitry Torokhov
2010-10-13 16:31 ` Ping Cheng
2010-10-13 18:21 ` Henrik Rydberg
2010-10-13 20:15 ` Ping Cheng
2010-10-13 20:50 ` Chris Bagwell
2010-10-13 21:19 ` Ping Cheng
2010-10-29 20:45 ` Ping Cheng
2010-10-30 0:55 ` Chris Bagwell
2010-10-30 11:52 ` Ping Cheng
2010-11-01 14:43 ` Henrik Rydberg [this message]
2010-09-04 13:43 ` [PATCH 5/5] input: wacom: Add a quirk for lowres Bamboo devices (rev2) Henrik Rydberg
2010-09-04 21:24 ` [PATCH 0/5] input: wacom: Initial support for Bamboo (rev3) Ping Cheng
2010-09-05 14:28 ` Chris Bagwell
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