Hi Emil, On Wed, 21 Sep 2016, Emil Velikov wrote: > On 20 September 2016 at 09:32, Peter Griffin <peter.griffin@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > Hi Emil, > > > > On Tue, 20 Sep 2016, Emil Velikov wrote: > > > >> On 5 September 2016 at 14:16, Peter Griffin <peter.griffin@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > >> > ST_SLIM_REMOTEPROC must select REMOTEPROC, which exposes the following > >> > recursive dependency. > > > > > >> > > >> From a humble skim through remoteproc, drm and a few other subsystems > >> I think the above is wrong. All the drivers (outside of remoteproc), > >> that I've seen, depend on the core component, they don't select it. > > > > I will let Bjorn comment on the remoteproc subsystem Kconfig design, and > > why it is like it is. > > > > For this particular SLIM_RPROC I have added it to Kconfig in keeping with all > > the other drivers in the remoteproc subsystem which has exposed this recursive > > dependency issue. > > > > For this particular kconfig symbol a quick grep reveals more drivers in > > the kernel using 'select', than 'depend on' > > > > git grep "select VIRTIO" | wc -l > > 14 > > > > git grep "depends on VIRTIO" | wc -l > > 10 > > > Might be worth taking a closer look into these at some point. VIRTIO has no dependencies, and is a non visible symbol. Its Kconfig help also mentions that drivers should select it. > > > > >> Furthermore most places explicitly hide the drivers from the menu if > >> the core component isn't enabled. > > > > Remoteproc subsystem takes a different approach, the core code is only enabled > > if a driver which relies on it is enabled. This IMHO makes sense, as > > remoteproc is not widely used (only a few particular ARM SoC's). > > > > It is true that for subsystems which rely on the core component being > > explicitly enabled, they often tend to hide drivers which depend on it > > from the menu unless it is. This also makes sense. > > > >> > >> Is there something that requires such a different/unusual behaviour in > >> remoteproc ? > >> > > > > I'm not sure it is that unusual...looking at config USB, it selects USB_COMMON in > > mfd subsystem, client drivers select MFD_CORE. > > > On the USB case I'm not sure what the reasoning behind the USB vs > USB_COMMON split. In seems that one could just fold them, but that's > another topic. On the MFD side... it follows the select {,mis,ab}use. > With one (the only one?) MFD driver not using/selecting MFD_CORE doing > it's own version of mfd_add_devices... which could be reworked, > possibly. Much like selecting VIRTIO in this patch, MFD_CORE is a non visible symbol with no dependencies so it matches the documentation Jani referenced. I personally think the approach taken makes sense, as why would you want to have a CONFIG_MFD_CORE=y symbol being enabled unless you actually have a MFD device which uses it also enabled in your kernel? It seems to me a good solution to make the client drivers select the core component so that it only gets enabled if at least one driver requires it. This avoids having useless core code which will never be used compiled into the kernel and in the end a smaller kernel size for a given kernel configuration (better cache use etc etc). > > I've added Arnd to this thread, as I've seen lots of Kconfig patches from him > > recently, maybe he has some thoughts on whether this is the correct fix or not? > > > Ack. Fwiw, I believe that the reasoning put by Jani is perfeclty > reasonable, but it'll be great to hear others as well. Yes me to. However I don't think anything in this patch is at odds with the documentation Jani has referenced. regards, Peter. _______________________________________________ dri-devel mailing list dri-devel@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx https://lists.freedesktop.org/mailman/listinfo/dri-devel