From: Greg KH <greg@kroah.com>
To: Christopher Friesen <cfriesen@nortel.com>
Cc: Kyle Moffett <mrmacman_g4@mac.com>, Rick Niles <fniles@mitre.org>,
linux-kernel@vger.kernel.org
Subject: Re: 26 ways to set a device driver variable from userland
Date: Wed, 19 Oct 2005 21:04:19 -0700 [thread overview]
Message-ID: <20051020040419.GA9179@kroah.com> (raw)
In-Reply-To: <435691EF.8070406@nortel.com>
On Wed, Oct 19, 2005 at 12:35:27PM -0600, Christopher Friesen wrote:
> Kyle Moffett wrote:
>
> >>(4) sysfs
>
> >This is ideal for almost all device driver purposes.
>
> The one thing that I have yet to see a good solution for is
> transaction-based operations, where userspace passes in something (could
> be a command, a new value, a query, etc.) and expects some data in return.
>
> The ioctl() method is ideal for this, passing down a binary struct with
> a command/query member, and the driver fills in the rest of the struct
> based on the commnd.
>
> How do you do this cleanly via sysfs? It seems like you either double
> the number of syscalls (write to one file, read from another) or else
> you need to have sysfs files for every possible query/command, so that
> the input becomes implicitly encoded in the file that you are reading.
> This could end up creating a large number of files depending on the
> range of inputs.
>
> Are there any other standard ways to do this?
Take a look at configfs, as part of the ocfs2 patches in the -mm tree.
It is set up to help solve this using a filesystem much like sysfs.
thanks,
greg k-h
next prev parent reply other threads:[~2005-10-20 4:20 UTC|newest]
Thread overview: 8+ messages / expand[flat|nested] mbox.gz Atom feed top
2005-10-19 17:00 26 ways to set a device driver variable from userland Rick Niles
2005-10-19 17:34 ` Kyle Moffett
2005-10-19 18:35 ` Christopher Friesen
2005-10-19 23:32 ` Matt Helsley
2005-10-19 23:50 ` Neil Brown
2005-10-20 4:04 ` Greg KH [this message]
[not found] ` <1129745264.25383.36.camel@gnupooh.mitre.org>
2005-10-19 18:36 ` Kyle Moffett
2005-10-19 20:09 ` linux-os (Dick Johnson)
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