On Mon 20 Oct 00:22 PDT 2014, Lee Jones wrote: > On Fri, 17 Oct 2014, Bjorn Andersson wrote: > > On Wed 08 Oct 01:40 PDT 2014, Lee Jones wrote: > > [...] > > > > > +static struct qcom_smd_driver qcom_smd_rpm_driver = { > > > > + .probe = qcom_smd_rpm_probe, > > > > + .remove = qcom_smd_rpm_remove, > > > > + .callback = qcom_smd_rpm_callback, > > > > + .driver = { > > > > + .name = "qcom_smd_rpm", > > > > + .owner = THIS_MODULE, > > > > + .of_match_table = qcom_smd_rpm_of_match, > > > > + }, > > > > +}; > > > > + > > > > +module_qcom_smd_driver(qcom_smd_rpm_driver); > > > > > > I don't like this. What's wrong with the existing platform driver > > > code? > > > > > > > I started off with having smd child devices as platform drivers and had some > > accessor functions to find the open handles that triggered the probe() and > > register the callback with those. But this didn't feel very sane, so I did > > implemented a custom driver struct and probe prototype to simplify writing > > drivers. > > > > May I ask why you dislike this? This is how it's done in so many other places > > in the kernel... > > I don't believe that's the case. All owners of their own > module_*_driver() registration calls are busses (see below), whereas > 'qcom_smd' is just a driver. Things would soon get out of control if > we allowed every driver in the kernel to supply their own driver > registration information variants. > I modelled this after rpmsg, with the intention of having qcom_smd provide a "smd bus" and all client drivers sitting on that bus being probed and removed as the remote services appear and disappear. I'm afraid I don't understand what part I missed that makes my smd driver "just a driver". I will reread the documentation and try to figure out what I might have missed. Regards, Bjorn -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe devicetree" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html