Hi Pavel,
On 01/29/2015 10:14 PM, Pavel Machek wrote:
Hi!
+ - flash_fault - list of flash faults that may have occurred:
+ * led-over-voltage - flash controller voltage to the flash LED
+ has exceededthe limit specific to the flash controller
+ * flash-timeout-exceeded - the flash strobe was still on when
+ the timeout set by the user has expired; not all flash
+ controllers may set this in all such conditions
+ * controller-over-temperature - the flash controller has
+ overheated
+ * controller-short-circuit - the short circuit protection
+ of the flash controller has been triggered
+ * led-power-supply-over-current - current in the LED power
+ supply has exceeded the limit specific to the flash
+ controller
+ * indicator-led-fault - the flash controller has detected
+ a short or open circuit condition on the indicator LED
+ * led-under-voltage - flash controller voltage to the flash
+ LED has been below the minimum limit specific to
+ the flash
+ * controller-under-voltage - the input voltage of the flash
+ controller is below the limit under which strobing the
+ flash at full current will not be possible. The condition
+ persists until this flag is no longer set
+ * led-over-temperature - the temperature of the LED has exceeded
+ its allowed upper limit
+
+ Flash faults are cleared, if possible, by reading the attribute.
That's bad. Now you can no longer present flash_fault file as readable
to non-root users, and grep -ri foo /sys will interfere with your
camera application.
Bad interface, just fix it.
In my opinion it isn't crucial for the user to be aware of the
fact that some non-persistent fault happened right after strobing the
flash (e.g. over temperature).
I cannot see anything harmful in the situation when someone does grep
on /sys and clears non-persistent fault on a flash LED device.
So why export the faults at all?
Faults may prevent strobing the flash in case of some devices.
The example of such a device is ADP1663 (drivers/media/i2c/adp1653.c).
This driver reads the faults before strobing the flash and if a
fault preventing strobing has occurred it returns -EBUSY.
If this driver was made a LED Flash class driver, then it would
expose flash_faults attribute. The driver would probably need
redesigning - checking the faults before strobing would have to be
avoided and it should be left to the userspace.
I mean... another user can just read the file in loop, and the camera
application will not get any useful information.
If the fault is no longer valid at the time of access from camera
application, then why it should be reported then?
Also, not all devices may be able to report the faults that happened
earlier but are not valid at the time of I2C readout. In that case the
user will never now that the fault has ever occurred, unless they read
the flash_fault attribute at the proper moment.
In this case we cannot enforce consistent policy for all devices.
Too bad. But lets do a good job at least for devices where we can do a
good job, ok?
Please describe the use case when clearing the fault on read can be
harmful, if you have any.
while true; grep -ri foo /sys; done
And no, your application trying to read the faults will very probably
read nothing.
And this is OK. If a non-persistent fault was read by grep, then it
will not be reported anymore. If someone wanted to maintain the history
of flash faults for a device, then they are free to do it on their
own by periodically reading the attribute, however I don't think
it would be practical during every day use.
--
Best Regards,
Jacek Anaszewski
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