On Thu, Aug 20, 2009 at 09:09:21AM +0300, Avi Kivity wrote: > On 08/20/2009 01:16 AM, Joel Becker wrote: > > With an ioctl() that isn't (well) documented, you have to go > >read the structure and probably even read the code that uses the > >structure to be sure what you are doing. > > An ioctl structure and a configfs/sysfs readdir provide similar > information (the structure also provides the types of fields and > isn't able to hide some of these fields). With an ioctl structure, I can't take a look at what the values look like unless I read the code or write up a C program. With a configfs file, I can just cat the thing. > "Looking at the values" is what I meant by discouraging > documentation. That implies looking at a self-documenting live > system. But that tells you nothing about which fields were added in > which versions, or fields which are hidden because your hardware > doesn't support them or because you didn't echo 1 > somewhere. Most ioctls don't tell you that either. It certainly won't let you know that field foo_arg1 is ignored unless foo_arg2 is set to 2, or things like that. The problem of versioning requires discipline either way. It's not obvious from many ioctls. Conversely, you can create versioned configfs items via attributes or directories (same for sysfs, etc). > The maintainer of the subsystem should provide a library that talks > to the binary interface and a CLI program that talks to the library. > Boring nonkernely work. Alternatively a fuse filesystem to talk to > the library, or an IDL can replace the library. Again, that helps the user nothing. I don't know it exists. I don't have it installed. Unless it ships with the kernel, I have no idea about it. > Many things start oriented at people and then, if they're useful, > cross the lines to machines. You can convert a machine interface to > a human interface at the cost of some work, but it's difficult to > undo the deficiencies of a human oriented interface so it can be > used by a program. It's work to convert either way. Outside of fast-path things, the time it takes to strtoll() is unimportant. Don't use configfs/sysfs for fast-path things. > I disagree. If it's useful for a human, it's useful for a machine. And if it's useful for a machine, a human might want to peek at it by hand someday to debug it. > Moreover, *fs+bash is a user interface. It happens that bash is > good at processing files, and filesystems are easily discoverable, > so we code to that. But we make it more difficult to provide other > interfaces to the same controls. Not really. Writing a sane CLI to a binary interface takes about as much work as writing a sane API library to a text interface. The hard part is not the conversion, in either direction. The hard part is defining the interface. > >Configfs, as its name implies, > >really does exist for that second case. It turns out that it's quite > >nice to use for the first case too, but if folks wanted to go the > >syscall route, no worries. > > Eventually everything is used in the first case. For example in the > virtualization space it is common to have a zillion nodes running > virtual machine that are only accessed by a management node. Everything is eventually used in the second case, and admin or a developer debugging why the daemon is going wrong. Much easier from a shell or other generic accessor. Much faster than having to download your library's source, learn how to build it, add some printfs, discover you have the wrong printfs... > __u64 says everything about the type and space requirements of a > field. It doesn't describe everything (like the name of the field > or what it means) but it does provide a bunch of boring information > that people rarely document in other ways. > > If my program reads a *fs field into a u32 and it later turns out > the field was a u64, I'll get an overflow. It's a lot harder to get > that wrong with a typed interface. And if you send the wrong thing to configfs or sysfs you'll get an EINVAL or the like. It doesn't look like configfs and sysfs will work for you. Don't use 'em! Write your interfaces with ioctls and syscalls. Write your libraries and CLIs. In the end, you're the one who has to maintain them. I don't ever want anyone thinking I want to force configfs on them. I wrote it because it solves its class of problem well, and many people find it fits them too. So I'll use configfs, you'll use ioctl, and our users will be happy either way because we make it work! Joel -- Life's Little Instruction Book #396 "Never give anyone a fruitcake." Joel Becker Principal Software Developer Oracle E-mail: joel.becker@xxxxxxxxxx Phone: (650) 506-8127 -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe kvm" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html