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From: Heiko Schocher <hs@denx.de>
To: Greg KH <greg@kroah.com>
Cc: linuxppc-dev@ozlabs.org, linux-kernel@vger.kernel.org,
	Detlev Zundel <dzu@denx.de>
Subject: Re: SYSFS: need a noncaching read
Date: Wed, 12 Sep 2007 13:13:32 +0200	[thread overview]
Message-ID: <1189595612.6659.23.camel@Zeus.EmbLux> (raw)
In-Reply-To: <20070912100123.GA23182@kroah.com>

Hello Greg

Am Mittwoch, den 12.09.2007, 03:01 -0700 schrieb Greg KH:
> On Wed, Sep 12, 2007 at 07:32:07AM +0200, Robert Schwebel wrote:
> > On Tue, Sep 11, 2007 at 11:43:17AM +0200, Heiko Schocher wrote:
> > > I have developed a device driver and use the sysFS to export some
> > > registers to userspace.
> > 
> > Uuuh, uggly. Don't do that. Device drivers are there to abstract things,
> > not to play around with registers from userspace.
> > 
> > > I opened the sysFS File for one register and did some reads from this
> > > File, but I alwas becoming the same value from the register, whats not
> > > OK, because they are changing. So I found out that the sysFS caches
> > > the reads ... :-(
> > 
> > Yes, it does. What you can do is close()ing the file handle between
> > accesses, which makes it work but is slow.
> 
> Do an lseek back to 0 and then re-read, you will get called in your
> driver again.

No thats not true. I thought this too, but if I make a:

seek (fd, 0L, SEEK_SET);

in Userspace, there is no retrigger in the sysFS, my driver is *not*
called again. So I made a own sysfs_seek function, which does retrigger
the driver ...

Is this really wanted in the sysFS, that there is no way to retrigger a
read?

thanks
Heiko
-- 
DENX Software Engineering GmbH,     MD: Wolfgang Denk & Detlev Zundel
HRB 165235 Munich, Office: Kirchenstr.5, D-82194 Groebenzell, Germany

  parent reply	other threads:[~2007-09-12 11:10 UTC|newest]

Thread overview: 11+ messages / expand[flat|nested]  mbox.gz  Atom feed  top
2007-09-11  9:43 SYSFS: need a noncaching read Heiko Schocher
2007-09-12  2:05 ` David Gibson
2007-09-12  3:18   ` Michael Ellerman
2007-09-12  5:32 ` Robert Schwebel
2007-09-12 10:01   ` Greg KH
2007-09-11 19:19     ` Nick Piggin
2007-09-12 17:57       ` Neil Brown
2007-09-12 11:13     ` Heiko Schocher [this message]
2007-09-12 11:39       ` Greg KH
2007-09-12 11:59         ` Heiko Schocher
2007-09-17  5:22     ` Tejun Heo

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