On Sun, Jan 11, 2015 at 10:29:00AM -0600, atull wrote: > the FPGA image. If someone wants there to be only one FPGA image on > the FGPA forever, they will probably not be using this framework; their > FPGA will probably be loaded before Linux boots up. Nonsense, loading the FPGA through Linux is much better, it avoids having to deal with this complexity in the boot loader and means that Linux can be used to locate the huge image in some kind of sensible filesystem, log failures, do any FPGA startup sequence/etc. With hotplug and DT I find this this works very well. The FPGA devices simply are not registered with the kernel until userspace gives the OK (in future a DT overload can handle this) If you keep with the notion that the DT overload specifies the matching FPGA firmware then it makes alot more sense to me to use DT overlays as the API to change the file name - not sysfs. To reload a FPGA, unload the DT overlay (this would have to disconnect all the drivers), de-program the FPGA, the load a new DT overlay, which reprograms and re-binds the new drivers. All those steps have to be done anyhow, you can't just swap the HW while drivers are attached. .. and if there are no drivers then Alan is right, this is the wrong interface for the 'FPGA as a user space co-processor' model. I would also re-iterate my earlier comments: requiring the whole FPGA image to be held in ram makes this useless for any of my applications. Jason _______________________________________________ devel mailing list devel@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx http://driverdev.linuxdriverproject.org/mailman/listinfo/driverdev-devel