On Tue, Oct 25, 2011 at 10:05:32AM +0200, Tony Lindgren wrote:
- Grant Likely grant.likely@secretlab.ca [111024 12:31]:
On Mon, Oct 24, 2011 at 09:48:19AM +0200, Linus Walleij wrote:
On Mon, Oct 24, 2011 at 9:36 AM, Grant Likely grant.likely@secretlab.ca wrote:
On Mon, Oct 24, 2011 at 09:26:38AM +0200, Linus Walleij wrote:
(...)
I was more thinking along the lines of one device per GPIO controller, then you ioctl() to ask /dev/gpio0 how many pins it has or so.
And there is also the question of whether it is even a good idea to export pinctrl manipulation to userspace.
The application I've seen is in automatic control.
I think people do things like connect they GPIO pins to electrical relays, plus on top of that they use all the stuff in drivers/staging/iio.
All that from userspace. Controlling entire factories and industrial robots, weapon systems too, I'm afraid.
The control of these dangerous things runs on a realtime-patched kernel, in a single userspace app with a few threads and they have done some realtime-tetris scheduling the beast more or less manually with SCHED_FIFO. Basically that app is all that runs on the board, and its threads take precedence over everything else on the system.
That is the typical beast that is poking around on the GPIO sysfs interfaces...
... which maybe should be encouraged to use some form of uio driver. :-)
Changing pins from userspace is extremely handy for debugging drivers and PM. For normal use case there should not be any need except to view the values.
But for debugging we should have some interface for changing the values either via debugfs or some user space program.
I've got no issue with a debugfs interface, although it would probably a good idea to put a big scary warning into klog when userspace starts manipulating pinctrl setting. Maybe should taint the kernel too. Anything manipulating pinctrl, even more than gpio, *really* needs to know what it is doing. I'm not worried about hacking around when doing board bringup and debug, but I'm all for barriers to actual applications using it.
.... of course this also assumes that users have an easy to use alternative that isn't as scary as exposing all of pinctl to userspace.
g.