On Monday, March 26, 2012 03:25:17 AM H. Peter Anvin wrote: > On 03/25/2012 05:45 PM, Thomas Renninger wrote: > > Best would be if no distro specific mkinitrd magic is needed and it's > > just as easy as it is: > > cp DSDT.aml /boot/initrd-test > > cat /boot/initrd >>/boot/initrd-test > > and add a test boot entry to grub's menu.lst or whereever. > > Then developers would not have to look at distro specific implementations > > (which should not exist) about how to test a table quickly. > > There is no distro-specific magic needed. What I'm proposing is > basically what you have above, except that your DSDT.aml would be > wrapped in a cpio header. What I would like to ask from you is if it > makes sense to have kernel/acpi/DSDT, kernel/acpi/SSDT and so on, or > just make it a single kernel/acpi member. Do the names have to be fixed? Then it would not make much sense. Possibly placeholder file names like: table1.aml...table10.aml could be defined. Especially the possibility of several SSDTs makes a naming convention rather ugly: SSDT1.aml, SSDT2.aml... If there is a directory which (only) contains all ACPI table files that can be scanned and the file names do not matter, it's rather nice to set it up in userspace. I guess I have to do 2 iterations then: - Go through all files in this dir, validate each as a valid ACPI table and sum up the size of all these files -> Reserve "size of all files". - Then do a 2nd iteration and copy all these files into the reserved memory area. If there is only one file where all ACPI table binaries are glued together kernel/acpi_tables.binary.blob my code should already work as good as unmodified. Not sure what is best and whether anybody cares about how the tables are layed out. I guess I just wait until your functionality is in linux-next and give it a closer look then and may come up with a new patch. > By wrapping in a cpio container it becomes a generic mechanism. > > >> By the way, if "relying on the bootloader" was an option in any way > > > > Why exactly is a change in the bootloader not an option? > > Not sure whether a version number is passed, but the magic number could be > > changed for now. > > There are a lot of bootloaders, and one of the most commonly used ones > has a very adversarial relationship with the kernel maintainers. > > > If the new magic number is passed, we get a linked list. > > The linked list stuff is already supported. This interface has been > supported in the kernel since 2007. Ok, got it. Thanks. Thomas -- 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