On Sat, Jun 15, 2024 at 09:28:50AM +0200, Takashi Iwai wrote:
In the commit coment, I can see "that's the only way to filter out the invalid values", however it not so good idea, since the ALSA control core function loses transparency against control elements somehow.
Transparency? The sanity check of input values is done in each driver side, hence some overhead is more or less always present, depending on the implementation.
Furthermore, I can see "there is no corresponding driver", however it is suspicious somehow. It would be smart to charge the validation implementation for user-defined control element set if forcing it.
The context there implies that, in the case of user elements, all handled in sound/core/control.c, and there is no other dedicated driver code handling the control put for those controls, hence sound/core/control.c is the only place where we can address the issue.
If you can force the validation to _all_ of the existing drivers by any kind of mechanism, it would be. Actually, not. We can have such driver which handles the write request without such validation, and control core allows it. The kernel configuration is to ease the detection of such drivers (and applications) in application runtime. Therefore the transparency would be lost by the patch.
Assuming that two control element exist in a sound card, which has the same information and TLV response, except for the flag of SNDRV_CTL_ELEM_ACCESS_USER. For the same value data, one operation with SNDRV_CTL_IOCTL_ELEM_WRITE is successful, and another operation with SNDRV_CTL_ELEM_ACCESS_USER is failed. When encountering this issue, the programmer of the application suspect the bug pertaining to the latter control, then the programmer find the latter has SNDRV_CTL_ELEM_ACCESS_USER. Then the programmer would judge that 'I got it, it is a bug of user-defined control element set' even if the program includes the bug for min/max/step computation and the underlying sound driver includes the bug not to validate value data.
The patch loses transparency in the above step. Without the patch, both operations finish with the equivalent result.
Nevertheless, I think the validation is itself preferable. In my opinion, the validation before/after the call of 'snd_kcontrol_put_t' would result in the different argument. The 'validate-before-call' is the argument of control core function, while 'validate-after-call is the argument of implementation of user-defined element set. The patch should belong to the latter to extend current implementation of user-defined element set. Thus I suggest to put the validation into the put callback function, regardless of the optimization to which you address.
Regards
Takashi Sakamoto