Hi Wolfram, Thanks a lot for your review and comments. I understand and will update with those APIs and send out a V2. Thanks & Best Regards, Rajat Jain On Wed, Oct 1, 2014 at 11:34 PM, Wolfram Sang <wsa@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > >> I understand and agree. In fact in the internal version of this driver >> (that I have not yet sent out for review), we do have APIs added >> similar to what you mention above. Currently I have APIs that: >> - Enable / Disable PCIe links. >> - Change the upstream port. >> - Enable / Disable Non-transparent mode etc. > > Now, that sounds better to me... > >> However, I did not send them all out for review because I don't have >> the hardware to try and test them out on ALL the supported devices >> (also would require considerable amount of time). I have tested those >> APIs on PEX8713 only, because for e.g.I only have PEX8713 in a HW that >> connects to 2 CPUs at the same time. > > That is a common problem to not have enough hardware to test. You could > ask on the PCI mailing list for testers. The solution usually lies in > showing the code rather than not showing the code. > >> the switch. Yes, I agree that we can have another layer of abstraction >> so that we have: >> >> - The Core logic code (that knows "How do we want the switch to behave") >> - A PEX8xxx driver (that knows "which registers to program") >> - A PEX8xxx I2C driver ("How to program those registers") - this driver. >> >> I do understand that your suggestion is to include and bundle the >> latter two into this same driver. > > It definately should be this way. Nobody else than the PEX8xxx driver > should be able to send I2C messeges to the device! And this is > absolutely standard, the logic how to talk to a device knows also how to > prepare the I2C messages. One reason where it could be factored out is > if there are multiple ways of transportation possible, like I2C or SPI. > >> However since the possibilities >> (about which APIs to provide) are too much and not enough hardware to >> test it, would it be acceptable if I include those APIs, but support >> them for only 1 device (and return error for others)? > > Start with what YOU need and show us (all of it). From there, we can > decide: do we start with one driver and factor out later, do we start > with a sub-subsystem right away, etc... And there is still the question > what APIs you provide, how they are implemented and if we really should > have them in-kernel. I think that question will be more interesting for > Bjorn because I don't really know much about switches in the PCI world. > >> with those APIs, I feel exposing the Read/Write APIs will be useful - >> because what core logic wants to achieve can be highly device and >> platform specific. > > That could also be solved by fixup-callbacks, but we'd need to see the > core to tell, really. > >> Also, a sysfs interface for this switch is proving >> to be a very helpful development aid :-) (personal experience :-)) > > Sure, but such development aids don't need to be upstream. Especially if > they create ABI such as sysfs-entries. > > Thanks and regards, > > Wolfram -- 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