Re: [PATCH] Bluetooth: qca: generalise device address check

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Hi Johan,

On 5/2/2024 3:41 PM, Johan Hovold wrote:
On Thu, May 02, 2024 at 12:35:19PM +0530, Janaki Ramaiah Thota wrote:
On 4/30/2024 6:37 PM, Johan Hovold wrote:

But here we disagree. A non-unique address is not a valid one as it will
cause collisions if you have more than one such controller.

I understand that this may be convenient/good enough for developers in
some cases, but this can hurt end users that do not realise why things
break.

And a developer can always configure an address manually or patch the
driver as needed for internal use.

Are there any other reasons that makes you want to keep the option to
configure the device address through NVM files? I'm assuming you're not
relying on patching NVM files to provision device-specific addresses
after installation on target?

We prefer unique address to be flashed on OTP (persistent) memory of
BT-Chip, which is supported by almost all QC BT-chips.

Yes, that is certainly the best option for everyone.

If someone is not able to do that/ does not prefer that, they still
have an option to flash unique address in firmware binary (NVM)file.
This does not require setting BD address from user space.

Also until a developer flashes OTP/ keep unique BD-Address in NVM,
he should be able to run most of the use cases from Device, that's
why we want to make it as configured.

Ok, but a developer can still do this since they can patch the driver to
disable the check temporarily or, alternatively, just update the
devicetree with a valid unique address.

In our opinion this provides best Out of box experience.


If a developer has to patch a code/update device-tree, that is not
a "out of box" experience. By "out of box" we meant, things should
work without much changes required.

You can also look into improving support in user space (e.g. bluez) for
providing a valid unique address in a simple text-based configuration
file.


We don't think putting a must-have dependency in user space is the
right thing to do, especially when we own a code in kernel space.

That would be useful for all Linux users and not require having access
to Qualcomm specific tools to update the NVM configuration file (which
could also be in a read-only file system, e.g. on Android).


Having a non-unique valid address allows a developer to handle all
scenarios where he/she is dealing with DUT + commercial device and
in such case, default BD-Address from nvm file should also be okay.
Only when 2/more similar devices are in the mix, they need unique
address. In that case we are providing end developers with a NVM
utility(part of Qcom build Not open source tool)to change this
default BD-Address.

Johan

-Janaki Ram




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