From mboxrd@z Thu Jan 1 00:00:00 1970 From: Chris Friesen Subject: Re: how to report network device errors to userspace? Date: Wed, 19 Jun 2002 17:19:14 -0400 Sender: owner-netdev@oss.sgi.com Message-ID: <3D10F552.C05ADD53@nortelnetworks.com> References: Mime-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit Cc: netdev@oss.sgi.com Return-path: To: Donald Becker List-Id: netdev.vger.kernel.org Donald Becker wrote: > > On Wed, 19 Jun 2002, Chris Friesen wrote: > > > I'm curious about the proper way for a network device driver to report > > faults to userspace. > > What type of fault? I'm looking for asynchronous notification of events such as loss of ethernet carrier or SONET LOS/LOF/LCD/RDI/AIS. When the driver figures out (whether interrupt or poll-based) that it's lost connectivity it then somehow notifies a userspace app that something has happened, so the userspace app can deal with it. Currently the way we are doing it for ethernet is that the userspace app calls a device ioctl() with SIOCGMIIREG multiple times per second, but it would be nice to have the driver notify us asynchronously. > People very much care. There are sufficient reporting mechanisms for > most errors -- it's much more consistent, orthogonal and thorough than > other device types. Compare /proc/net/dev with the errors reported for > disks, serial, USB, keyboard... Is it possible to select() on an entry in /proc/net becoming readable? Is reading from /proc/net and converting from ASCII faster than doing an ioctl() to the driver and getting binary data? Basically, I want a userspace app to be notified somehow by the kernel that a link that I've expressed interest in has lost physical connectivity, and I want to get that information as fast as possible after the event. I've hacked a SONET driver to allow a userspace app to register its pid, which then gets sent SIGUSR1 on critical events to tell it to use ioctl() to get the actual information, but this is not very clean nor is it scalable. Thanks, Chris -- Chris Friesen | MailStop: 043/33/F10 Nortel Networks | work: (613) 765-0557 3500 Carling Avenue | fax: (613) 765-2986 Nepean, ON K2H 8E9 Canada | email: cfriesen@nortelnetworks.com