Hi Andre, * Andre Guedes <andre.guedes@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> [2011-06-22 15:33:19 -0300]: > Hi Marcel, > > On Wed, Jun 22, 2011 at 1:57 PM, Marcel Holtmann <marcel@xxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > Hi Andre, > > > >> > any reason why we want this separated and being under host stack control > >> > in the first place. Should we not always enable LE if we can support it? > >> > What are the reason to run an LE capable BlueZ on an LE capable dongle > >> > and then not enable LE? > >> > > >> > >> I don't know the reason why, but today LE enabling is separated and is > >> under host control. There is an option in main.conf (EnableLE) to > >> enable/disable LE. > >> > >> AFAIK, the reason we want to disable LE is qualification tests only. Also, > >> since LE support is under development we may not wanna have LE enabled > >> by default (maybe this is another reason). > > > > for that I would have used a enable_le kernel module option since it > > should be all triggered by the kernel anyway. > > > >> > Maybe we should just have a generic kernel mgmt features enabling > >> > command. One thing that I do not wanna do is to just blindly make a copy > >> > of HCI commands for mgmt interface. The controller abstraction for the > >> > mgmt interface is suppose to have a feature list so we can check what > >> > the kernel supports and what not. > >> > > >> > >> We had a little discussion here and we came up with this idea of having > >> new parameter to the module (e. g. enable_le) to enable/disable LE. If > >> the module is loaded with enable_le=y we would enable LE host support. > >> Once LE support is stable enough, we have enable_le=y by default. > >> This approach we don't need a mgmt command. > > > > See above ;) > > > > I am open for discussion on how we might solve this in a bit more > > generic way on let this control by the user. Mainly for qualification > > testing and UPF testing. However we need a clear story for LE and SSP > > since both are host stack driven features. > > For LE story, the enable_le module param should be enough. IMHO, LE > support shouldn't be controlled by the user. If hardware, kernel and BlueZ > support LE then LE should be enabled. > > If you have LE supported hardware, kernel and BlueZ but for some reason > (e.g. qualification tests) you want to disable LE, then you load the module > with enable_le=n parameter. > > For now, while LE support is under development, enable_le default value > would be false. Once we have LE support stable enough, we change its > default value to true. Once we add enable_le I think we can also remove enable_smp, unless this is needed for for some qualification test. But I don't think so. Gustavo -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-bluetooth" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html