śr., 4 gru 2019 o 23:34 Andy Shevchenko <andy.shevchenko@xxxxxxxxx> napisał(a): > > On Wed, Dec 4, 2019 at 6:03 PM Bartosz Golaszewski <brgl@xxxxxxxx> wrote: > > > > From: Bartosz Golaszewski <bgolaszewski@xxxxxxxxxxxx> > > > > Currently there is no way for user-space to be informed about changes > > in status of GPIO lines e.g. when someone else requests the line or its > > config changes. We can only periodically re-read the line-info. This > > is fine for simple one-off user-space tools, but any daemon that provides > > a centralized access to GPIO chips would benefit hugely from an event > > driven line info synchronization. > > > > This patch adds a new ioctl() that allows user-space processes to reuse > > the file descriptor associated with the character device for watching > > any changes in line properties. Every such event contains the updated > > line information. > > > > Currently the events are generated on three types of status changes: when > > a line is requested, when it's released and when its config is changed. > > The first two are self-explanatory. For the third one: this will only > > happen when another user-space process calls the new SET_CONFIG ioctl() > > as any changes that can happen from within the kernel (i.e. > > set_transitory() or set_debounce()) are of no interest to user-space. > > > +/** > > + * struct gpioline_info_changed - Information about a change in status > > + * of a GPIO line > > + * @timestamp: estimate of time of status change occurrence, in nanoseconds > > + * @event_type: one of GPIOLINE_CHANGED_REQUESTED, GPIOLINE_CHANGED_RELEASED > > + * and GPIOLINE_CHANGED_CONFIG > > + * @info: updated line information > > + */ > > +struct gpioline_info_changed { > > + __u64 timestamp; > > + __u32 event_type; > > + struct gpioline_info info; > > + __u32 padding[4]; /* for future use */ > > +}; > > Has this been tested against 64-bit kernel / 32-bit userspace case? > No. Since this is a new thing - do you think it's possible to simply arrange the fields or add padding such that the problem doesn't even appear in the first place? Bart