On Tue, Mar 29, 2011 at 01:05:02PM +0200, Arnd Bergmann wrote: > On Tuesday 29 March 2011, Waldemar.Rymarkiewicz@xxxxxxxxx wrote: > > >Yes, NFC seems to be a good fit for a new socket family. > > >Especially if we ever want to have a proper NFC p2p support > > >from the kernel. > > >Sending HCI commands should be done through a dedicated > > >netlink socket too. > > > > > >I am currently strting to work on such solution, and I hope to > > >be able to come up with a basic prototype for it in a few weeks. > > > > What about common drivers interface in this case. > > Should we go for common /dev/nfcX interface as well? > > I fear there can only be one. A good implementation of a socket > interface would mean that there is no need for a character device. My idea of an initial NFC subsystem architecture was actually the following one: - A core NFC layer against which NFC drivers would register. - A netlink socket for handling the HCI commands. That would put a big part of the NFC HCI layer in kernel land and could potentially simplify the existing NFC stacks. - A socket family for the LLCP abstraction, a.k.a. NFC peer to peer mode. We can start working on the first 2 items and leave the last one as a future enhancement, since what NFC is currently mostly used for is tag reading/writing and smartcard emulation. Basically, we'd replace the current character device option with a netlink one, allowing for a single kernel entry point for multiple applications willing to do NFC. Cheers, Samuel. -- Intel Open Source Technology Centre http://oss.intel.com/ -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-i2c" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html