On Wed, 22 Nov 2023 16:08:50 +0200 Vladimir Oltean wrote: > My understanding of Jakub's email was that he wants to see the functionality > offered by SIOCGHWTSTAMP and SIOCSHWTSTAMP converted to netlink. I don't > think that ethtool is the correct netlink family for that, given that > these aren't ethtool ioctls to begin with. Maybe the new netdev netlink > family. The conversion in its basic form would offer exactly the same > functionality. Well, ethtool has been the catch all for a lot of random things for the longest time. The question is whether we want to extend ETHTOOL_GET_TS_INFO or add a third API somewhere else. And if we do - do we also duplicate the functionality of ETHTOOL_GET_TS_INFO (i.e. getting capabilities)? My vote is that keeping it in ethtool is less bad than 3rd API. > The _listing_ of hwtstamp providers is what could be done through ethtool > netlink, similar but not identical to the way in which you are proposing > today (you are presenting blanket "layers" which correspond to netdev and > phylib, rather than individual providers). > > The concept of an "active phc_index" would not explicitly exist in the > UAPI. Thus I'm not sure what's with this TSINFO_SET being floated around. > The only thing would exist is a configurable rx_filter and tx_type per > hwtstamp provider (aka "{phc_index, qualifier}"). User space will have > to learn to select the hwtstamp provider it wants to configure through > netlink, and use for its class of traffic. "Active provider" is the one that has TX_ON, rx != FILTER_NONE, right? > This is why I mentioned by ndo_hwtstamp_set() conversion, because > suddenly it is a prerequisite for any further progress to be done. > You can't convert SIOCSHWTSTAMP to netlink if there are some driver > implementations which still use ndo_eth_ioctl(). They need to be > UAPI-agnostic. Right, definitely. > I'm not sure what's with Richard's mention of the "_2" variants of the > ioctls. Probably a low-effort suggestion which was a bit out of context. > His main point, that you cannot extend struct hwtstamp_config as that > has a fixed binary format, is perfectly valid though. This is why > netlink is preferable, because if done correctly (meaning not with > NLA_BINARY attributes), then it is much more extensible because all > attributes are TLVs. Use NLA_BINARY, and you will run into the exact > extensibility issues that the ioctl interface has.