On Tue, 12 Nov 2013, Jingoo Han wrote: > On Tuesday, November 12, 2013 8:57 AM, Kyungmin Park wrote: > > From: Kyungmin Park <kyungmin.park@xxxxxxxxxxx> > > > > The most mobile phones have Ambient Light Sensors and it changes brightness according lux. > > It means it changes backlight brightness frequently by just writing sysfs node, so it generates uevent. > > > > Usually there's no user to use this backlight changes. But it forks udev worker threads and it takes > > about 5ms. The main problem is that it hurts other process activities. so remove it. > > > > Kay said > > "Uevents are for the major, low-frequent, global device state-changes, > > not for carrying-out any sort of measurement data. Subsystems which > > need that should use other facilities like poll()-able sysfs file or > > any other subscription-based, client-tracking interface which does not > > cause overhead if it isn't used. Uevents are not the right thing to > > use here, and upstream udev should not paper-over broken kernel > > subsystems." True. Now, let's take a look at reality: should you poll()/select() on a sysfs node that doesn't suport it, it will wait until the poll/select timeout happens (or EINTR happens), and userspace has absolutely NO way to detect whether a sysfs node has poll/select support. What happens if the sysfs interface did not provide poll/select support since day one, but rather added it later? Nobody will use it for a *long* time, if ever... unless you actually took pains to version the sysfs interface, and people actually care. > 'thinkpad_acpi.c' uses the 'BACKLIGHT_UPDATE_SYSFS'. > Henrique, can we remove it? Can't you fix this by rate-limiting, or otherwise adding an attribute that backlight devices should set when they need to supress change events? Is there a proper on-screen-display support path for the backlight class nowadays? Otherwise, you'd be removing the only way userspace ever had to do proper OSD of backlight changes... -- "One disk to rule them all, One disk to find them. One disk to bring them all and in the darkness grind them. In the Land of Redmond where the shadows lie." -- The Silicon Valley Tarot Henrique Holschuh ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ November Webinars for C, C++, Fortran Developers Accelerate application performance with scalable programming models. Explore techniques for threading, error checking, porting, and tuning. Get the most from the latest Intel processors and coprocessors. See abstracts and register http://pubads.g.doubleclick.net/gampad/clk?id=60136231&iu=/4140/ostg.clktrk _______________________________________________ ibm-acpi-devel mailing list ibm-acpi-devel@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/ibm-acpi-devel