pon., 17 gru 2018 o 13:59 Uwe Kleine-König <u.kleine-koenig@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx> napisał(a): > > On Mon, Dec 17, 2018 at 11:32:45AM +0100, Bartosz Golaszewski wrote: > > śr., 5 gru 2018 o 13:38 Bartosz Golaszewski > > <bgolaszewski@xxxxxxxxxxxx> napisał(a): > > > > > > śr., 5 gru 2018 o 13:20 Linus Walleij <linus.walleij@xxxxxxxxxx> napisał(a): > > > > > > > > On Mon, Dec 3, 2018 at 12:06 PM Uwe Kleine-König > > > > <u.kleine-koenig@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > > > > On Mon, Dec 03, 2018 at 11:57:26AM +0100, Bartosz Golaszewski wrote: > > > > > > > > > > It used to live in the gpio-mockup driver and I generalized it > > > > > > precisely because there was another driver - iio evgen - which was > > > > > > doing basically the same thing. While I don't know if there'll be more > > > > > > users (I'd guess it would be useful for testing purposes of other > > > > > > subsystems) having the same functionality implemented once is better > > > > > > than twice. > > > > > > > > > > The iio testing driver only needs the trigger and relies on an irq that > > > > > then calls the registerd handler. The iio driver doesn't need to tune > > > > > the edge sensitivity though and if your mockup driver just only calls > > > > > the fire routine if the configured sensitivity justifies that, > > > > > everything should work as expected. > > > > > > > > Simulating edges in the generic IRQ simulator codes seems > > > > generally useful to me, even if there is just one user now. > > > > > > > > Certainly for any kind of IRQ testing, it could be interesting to > > > > throw several low-to-high and high-to-low transitions > > > > on a driver and see how it reacts. > > > > > > > > But it is up to the irqchip maintainers to state whether they > > > > agree. > > > > > > > > > > All that would be great, but at this point I just want to fix broken > > > tests in user-space. After that we can think about how to > > > improve/approach simulating interrupts all we want. > > > > > > Marc: is my explanation for using an int instead of bool for > > > irq_sim_fire_edge() fine? Can Linus pick this up for fixes? > > > > > > > Ping. We have only this week left to fix the regression - can we get > > your Ack Marc? > > I don't understand the urge. The problem is that libgpiod's test is > failing. And that is because when userspace requested > IRQF_TRIGGER_FALLING the mockup driver also fires if the line rised and > with my change libgpiod now sees that and wonders about it. Apart from > the test failure both libgpiod and the gpio framework are entirely fine > (AFAICT). > > The "fix" under discussion is to modify the mockup driver to only report > a falling irq if the output is set to 0. But it also fires if the value > is already 0 and is set to 0 again. So the problem isn't addressed > completely, but only enough to make libgpiod's test suite report > success. > The problem with your approach is that you're treating gpio-mockup as a regular driver the goal of which is self-contained correctness. I treat it as a tool to test the userspace API. Of course libgpiod works correctly - it requests and receives the correct type of interrupts. So does the gpiolib in-kernel part. The problem indeed lies with the kernel testing module. But it doesn't matter - we want to make sure the uAPI works correctly i.e. it behaves the same with gpio-mockup as it would with a real driver for actual HW behind. We're not testing gpio-mockup(!) here. > In my eyes this is not how test-driven development works. Tests are > here to bring breakage into the light. That worked just fine here. And > now as a test fails, the goal is to fix the breakage, but not to change > just enough details to get the test to pass and then urge them through > because "we're already at -rc7 and userspace broke!" > The tests here are to find regressions in a) libgpiod and b) gpiolib kernel-to-userspace interface. The mockup module isn't part of either. The breakage in gpio-mockup/irq_sim is really not all that important. Whether the userspace API works is. And with a breakage like this we're now unable to check if it behaves correctly for events of specified types. So yes: for 4.20 I want to fix the gpio-mockup module just enough to keep the tests passing. > And no, the right fix isn't hard. My concerns were expressed Tuesday > last week, and the problem wasn't important enough since then to fix the > patch set. > I already told you on several occasions that I *will* address certain issues in irq_sim. It will *not* make you happy however because it will not use the mechanism you suggested in gpio-simulator as I still want to keep this relatively generic for others to use. I will fix other problems though - among others the one with multiple subsequent events of the same edge. I don't want to be in a hurry to propose something fast, so I want to patch the tests now and then have time to come up with a better solution. Linus agrees. I see no objections to that from neither Marc nor Thomas. I would really like to stop discussing this over and over again after my every e-mail in this thread. > But maybe it's just me and the Linux development process changed since I > learned about it and today the demand on quality isn't that high any > more. > First rule has always been "don't break the userspace" and everything else came after that. Best regards, Bartosz Golaszewski