Hi Daniel, On 18/02/15 15:42, Daniel Borkmann wrote:
This whole framework really looks like only tailored to your specific driver, I have no idea who else should reuse that?! So, I don't think putting this under drivers/net/pkt-sniffer/ is a good idea.
Yes, it is not necessarilly expected to be used by other 3rd party drivers. The reason of splitting out the framework code is to account of the fact the we may develop in the future othersimilar sniffer H/W for non-ethernet interfaces (eg. wifi). I can move the code under drivers/net/ethernet/linn as you mention below, although that may not account for non-ethernet backends in the
future.
Also it looks slightly confusing as if I understand you correctly, your module's purpose is to pass down some "packet pattern" to the hardware and match that in order to get a precise timestamp in return?
Yes, this point can be slightly confusing. A write to a packet socket bound to the interface is done to supply the command string to the sniffer H/W, while reads would return matched packet bytes + timestamps (throuch cmsg). Is there any other way to supply the command string except of a proprietary ioctl?
Might perhaps be better to have everything vendor-specific under something like drivers/net/ethernet/linn/ and have the framework squashed into the driver itself (if parts cannot be generalized in net/packet/).
Answered above.
It would be good if you can also avoid the extra uapi export. Perhaps it's possible to reuse at least some of the existing timestamping infrastructure?
I can remove that. The header file only contains the list of commands. They can be documented. The driver does use the existing timestamping infrastructure to return timestamps to user space. Thank you, Stathis -- 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