On Tue, 2009-09-01 at 16:11 +0800, Pavel Machek wrote: > Hi! > > > Introduce ALS sysfs class. > > > > ALS sysfs class provides a standard sysfs interface for > > Ambient Light Sensor devices. > > > > please read Documentation/ABI/testing/sysfs-class-als for > > detailed sysfs designs. > > Thanks for fixing the interface! > > > +static ssize_t > > +illuminance_show(struct device *dev, struct device_attribute *attr, char *buf) > > +{ > > + struct als_device *als = to_als_device(dev); > > + int illuminance; > > + int result; > > + > > + result = als->ops->get_illuminance(als, &illuminance); > > + if (result) > > + return result; > > + > > + if (!illuminance) > > + return sprintf(buf, "Illuminance below the supported range\n"); > > + else if (illuminance == -1) > > + return sprintf(buf, "Illuminance above the supported range\n"); > > + else if (illuminance < -1) > > + return -ERANGE; > > + else > > + return sprintf(buf, "%d\n", illuminance); > > +} > > that's nor particulary clean. One value per file and all that. Could > we simply return errnos in _all_ the error cases? (Docs would suggest > this contains integer so string is definitely unexpected). > IMO, 0 and -1 are not errors. they just suggest that the Ambient Light illuminance is beyond the device support range, while the device is still working normally. what about exporting these values (0 and -1) to user space directly? > > > +static ssize_t > > +adjustment_show(struct device *dev, struct device_attribute *attr, char *buf) > > +{ > > + struct als_device *als = to_als_device(dev); > > + int illuminance, adjustment; > > + int result; > > + > > + result = als->ops->get_illuminance(als, &illuminance); > > + if (result) > > + return result; > > + > > + if (illuminance < 0 && illuminance != -1) > > + return sprintf(buf, "Current illuminance invalid\n"); > > + > > + result = als_get_adjustment(als, illuminance, &adjustment); > > + if (result) > > + return result; > > + > > + return sprintf(buf, "%d%%\n", adjustment); > > +} > > You should not return strings... and in this case it is not clear how > the code works. You fill the buf, but then return...? As the adjustment is a percentage value, I added a '%' postfix so that users won't be confused. yes, it's okay to just export the integer, e.g. "100" instead of "100%". thanks, rui -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-acpi" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html