On Tue, May 13, 2014 at 03:10:59PM -0700, H. Peter Anvin wrote: > On 05/09/2014 03:38 PM, Josh Triplett wrote: > > On Fri, May 09, 2014 at 02:20:45PM -0700, H. Peter Anvin wrote: > >> On 05/09/2014 02:12 PM, Arnd Bergmann wrote: > >>> > >>>> However, if we're going to have these devices I'm wondering if having > >>>> /dev/portw and /dev/portl (or something like that) might not make sense, > >>>> rather than requiring a system call per transaction. > >>> > >>> Actually the behavior of /dev/port for >1 byte writes seems questionable > >>> already: There are very few devices on which writing to consecutive > >>> port numbers makes sense. Normally you just want to write a series > >>> of bytes (or 16/32 bit words) into the same port number instead, > >>> as the outsb()/outsw()/outsl() functions do. > >>> > >> > >> Indeed. I missed the detail that it increments the port index; it is > >> virtually guaranteed to be bogus. > > > > Exactly. It might make sense to have ioport8/ioport16/ioport32 devices > > that accept arbitrary-length reads and writes (divisible by the size) > > and do the equivalent of the string I/O instructions outs/ins, but for > > the moment I'd like to add the single device that people always seem to > > want and can't get from /dev/port. If someone's doing enough writes > > that doing a syscall per in/out instruction seems like too much > > overhead, they can write a real device driver or use ioperm/iopl. > > I really have a problem with the logic "our current interface is wrong, > so let's introduce another wrong interface which solves a narrow use > case". In some ways it would actually be *better* to use an ioctl > interface on /dev/port in that case... ioport{8,16,32} seems preferable to an ioctl on /dev/port, but in any case, I'd be happy to adapt this patch to whatever interface seems preferable. I just don't want to let the perfect be the enemy of the good here; 16-bit and 32-bit port operations are currently completely impossible via /dev/port, and I'm primarily interested in fixing that, not necessarily in creating a completely generalized interface for doing high-performance repeated I/O operations that ought to be in the kernel anyway. - Josh Triplett -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-api" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html