On Thursday 7 October 2021 12:49:47 CEST Kalle Valo wrote: > CAUTION: This email originated from outside of the organization. Do not click links or open attachments unless you recognize the sender and know the content is safe. > > > Kalle Valo <kvalo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx> writes: > > > Jérôme Pouiller <jerome.pouiller@xxxxxxxxxx> writes: > > > >>> >> >> I'm not really fond of having this kind of ASCII based parser in the > >>> >> >> kernel. Do you have an example compressed file somewhere? > >>> >> > > >>> >> > An example of uncompressed configuration file can be found here[1]. Once > >>> >> > compressed with [2], you get: > >>> >> > > >>> >> > {a:{a:4,b:1},b:{a:{a:4,b:0,c:0,d:0,e:A},b:{a:4,b:0,c:0,d:0,e:B},c:{a:4,b:0,c:0,d:0,e:C},d:{a:4,b:0,c:0,d:0,e:D},e:{a:4,b:0,c:0,d:0,e:E},f:{a:4,b:0,c:0,d:0,e:F},g:{a:4,b:0,c:0,d:0,e:G},h:{a:4,b:0,c:0,d:0,e:H},i:{a:4,b:0,c:0,d:0,e:I},j:{a:4,b:0,c:0,d:0,e:J},k:{a:4,b:0,c:0,d:0,e:K},l:{a:4,b:0,c:0,d:1,e:L},m:{a:4,b:0,c:0,d:1,e:M}},c:{a:{a:4},b:{a:6},c:{a:6,c:0},d:{a:6},e:{a:6},f:{a:6}},e:{b:0,c:1},h:{e:0,a:50,b:0,d:0,c:[{a:1,b:[0,0,0,0,0,0]},{a:2,b:[0,0,0,0,0,0]},{a:[3,9],b:[0,0,0,0,0,0]},{a:A,b:[0,0,0,0,0,0]},{a:B,b:[0,0,0,0,0,0]},{a:[C,D],b:[0,0,0,0,0,0]},{a:E,b:[0,0,0,0,0,0]}]},j:{a:0,b:0}} > >>> >> > >>> >> So what's the grand idea with this braces format? I'm not getting it. > >>> > > >>> > - It allows to describe a tree structure > >>> > - It is ascii (easy to dump, easy to copy-paste) > >>> > - It is small (as I explain below, size matters) > >>> > - Since it is similar to JSON, the structure is obvious to many people > >>> > > >>> > Anyway, I am not the author of that and I have to deal with it. > >>> > >>> I'm a supported for JSON like formats, flexibility and all that. But > >>> they belong to user space, not kernel. > >>> > >>> >> Usually the drivers just consider this kind of firmware configuration > >>> >> data as a binary blob and dump it to the firmware, without knowing what > >>> >> the data contains. Can't you do the same? > >>> > > >>> > [I didn't had received this mail :( ] > >>> > > >>> > The idea was also to send it as a binary blob. However, the firmware use > >>> > a limited buffer (1500 bytes) to parse it. In most of case the PDS exceeds > >>> > this size. So, we have to split the PDS before to send it. > >>> > > >>> > Unfortunately, we can't split it anywhere. The PDS is a tree structure and > >>> > the firmware expects to receive a well formatted tree. > >>> > > >>> > So, the easiest way to send it to the firmware is to split the tree > >>> > between each root nodes and send each subtree separately (see also the > >>> > comment above wfx_send_pds()). > >>> > > >>> > Anyway, someone has to cook this configuration before to send it to the > >>> > firmware. This could be done by a script outside of the kernel. Then we > >>> > could change the input format to simplify a bit the processing in the > >>> > kernel. > >>> > >>> I think a binary file with TLV format would be much better, but I'm sure > >>> there also other good choises. > >>> > >>> > However, the driver has already some users and I worry that changing > >>> > the input format would lead to a mess. > >>> > >>> You can implement a script which converts the old format to the new > >>> format. And you can use different naming scheme in the new format so > >>> that we don't accidentally load the old format. And even better if you > >>> add a some kind of signature in the new format and give a proper error > >>> from the driver if it doesn't match. > >> > >> Ok. I am going to change the input format. I think the new function is > >> going to look like: > >> > >> int wfx_send_pds(struct wfx_dev *wdev, u8 *buf, size_t buf_len) > >> { > >> int ret; > >> int start = 0; > >> > >> if (buf[start] != '{') { > >> dev_err(wdev->dev, "valid PDS start with '{'. Did you forget to compress it?\n"); > >> return -EINVAL; > >> } > >> while (start < buf_len) { > >> len = strnlen(buf + start, buf_len - start); > >> if (len > WFX_PDS_MAX_SIZE) { > >> dev_err(wdev->dev, "PDS chunk is too big (legacy format?)\n"); > >> return -EINVAL; > >> } > >> dev_dbg(wdev->dev, "send PDS '%s'\n", buf + start); > >> ret = wfx_hif_configuration(wdev, buf + start, len); > >> /* FIXME: Add error handling here */ > >> start += len; > >> } > >> return 0; > > > > Did you read at all what I wrote above? Please ditch the ASCII format > > completely. > > Sorry, I read this too hastily. I just saw "buf[start] != '{'" and > assumed this is the same ASCII format, but not sure anymore. Can you > explain what changes you made now? The script I am going to write will compute where the PDS have to be split (this work is currently done by the driver). The script will add a separating character (let's say '\0') between each chunk. The driver will just have to find the separating character, send the chunk and repeat. -- Jérôme Pouiller