On 06/18/2015 05:46 AM, Srinivas Kandagatla wrote: > Many thanks for review. > > On 16/06/15 23:43, Stephen Boyd wrote: >> On 05/21/2015 09:43 AM, Srinivas Kandagatla wrote: >>> >>>> + >>>> +static int nvmem_add_cells(struct nvmem_device *nvmem, >>>> + struct nvmem_config *cfg) >>>> +{ >>>> + struct nvmem_cell **cells; >>>> + struct nvmem_cell_info *info = cfg->cells; >>>> + int i, rval; >>>> + >>>> + cells = kzalloc(sizeof(*cells) * cfg->ncells, GFP_KERNEL); >>> >>> kcalloc > This is temporary array, I did this on intention, to make it easy to > kfree cells which are found invalid at runtime. Ok, but how does that change using kcalloc over kzalloc? I must have missed something. > > >>> + * >>> + * The return value will be an ERR_PTR() on error or a valid pointer >>> + nvmem->dev.of_node = config->dev->of_node; >>> + dev_set_name(&nvmem->dev, "%s%d", >>> + config->name ? : "nvmem", config->id); >> >> It may be better to always name it nvmem%d so that we don't allow the >> possibility of conflicts. > We can do that, but I wanted to make the sysfs and dev entries more > readable than just nvmem0, nvmem1... Well sysfs is not really for humans. It's for machines. The nvmem devices could have a name property so that a more human readable string is present. > >>> + >>> + device_initialize(&nvmem->dev); >>> + >>> + dev_dbg(&nvmem->dev, "Registering nvmem device %s\n", >>> + dev_name(&nvmem->dev)); >>> + >>> + rval = device_add(&nvmem->dev); >>> + if (rval) { >>> + ida_simple_remove(&nvmem_ida, nvmem->id); >>> + kfree(nvmem); >>> + return ERR_PTR(rval); >>> + } >>> + >>> + /* update sysfs attributes */ >>> + if (nvmem->read_only) >>> + sysfs_update_group(&nvmem->dev.kobj, &nvmem_bin_ro_group); >> >> It would be nice if this could be done before the device was registered. >> Perhaps have two device_types, one for read-only and one for read/write? > > The attributes are actually coming from the class object, so we have > no choice to update the attributes before the device is registered. > > May it would be more safe to have default as read-only and modify it > to read/write based on read-only flag? > > Can you assign the attributes to the device_type in the nvmem::struct device? I don't see why these attributes need to be part of the class. >> >>> +{ >>> + return class_register(&nvmem_class); >> >> I thought class was on the way out? Aren't we supposed to use bus types >> for new stuff? > Do you remember any conversation on the list about this? I could not > find it on web. > > on the other hand, nvmem is not really a bus, making it a bus type > sounds incorrect to me. > I found this post on the cpu class that Sudeep tried to introduce[1]. And there's this post from Kay that alludes to a unification of busses and classes[2]. And some other post where Kay says class is dead [3]. [1] https://lkml.org/lkml/2014/8/21/191 [2] https://lwn.net/Articles/471821/ [3] https://lkml.org/lkml/2010/11/11/17 -- Qualcomm Innovation Center, Inc. is a member of Code Aurora Forum, a Linux Foundation Collaborative Project -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-arm-msm" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html