On 11/02/2015 07:47 PM, Vesa Jääskeläinen wrote: > Hi, > > When we were using kernel 3.2 and with that board files we just got IIO > devices with static order so that we knew exactly what iio:device0 is. > > Now with device tree that order is not so static anymore especially when > using device overlays (have not yet tried that thou). If there would be > deferred probe for the device then if we have multiple iio:device's then > those could in theory be in any order. > > In example libiio uses iio device index to open the IIO device. So the > problem is to know what iio:device is what. > > If we look files under /sys/bus/iio/iio:deviceX. They do not reveal what > device this is (especially if there are multiple device of same type). There > does not seem to be a way to give custom name for the iio device from device > tree that could have been used as a cue. > > Device tree aliases kinda sounded a good idea to try. Eg. define adc0 alias > and then link it to actual device node in tree. > > Aliases could be found under /proc/device-tree/aliases. Looking at it shows > what device tree node it is. However there does not seem to be actual link > from any /proc/device-tree entries to kernel drivers exposed under sysfs. > And even the path components in device tree are not in same format as in > sysfs. So there is no 1:1 mapping possible here. > > IIO devices in /sys/bus/iio/iio:deviceX seem to be symlinks to actual > devices under /sys/devices and from there is physical path to the device and > under that the IIO device with the same name as is under /sys/bus/iio. > > So in theory we could make a mapping configuration file that specifies > logical name for iio device and then physical parent path for the device and > then find under it iio:device* files to determine what is the iio device > index for this physical device. Then open IIO device with that index in > example with libiio. Sounds a bit complex? > > So did we miss something on how this should be defined/accessed or is there > a slight issue here on how to identify iio devices? > > Don't know how device tree overlays affect this if we first load device tree > overlay with some configuration and then unload it and load another one with > different configuration. Hi, Yes, excellent analysis. This is a real issue. As you said there is no guarantee that the IIO device numbers are stable, they are assigned in the order the devices are registered. If the device are registered in a different order for whatever reason the numbers will change. You can use readlink on the IIO device in /sys/bus/iio/devices to get its position in the global device topology and be able to tell what the parent device is, but this path might not be completely stable either though. E.g. if your device is on a I2C bus and the number of the I2C bus is dynamically assigned it might change when the probe order changes. Alias seem to be one way to solve this issue. The big question remains is how to communicate the alias to userspace. For other device classes the alias index is used as the device index e.g. a device with alias i2c0 ends up being the i2c adapter with index 0. But with IIO where we support a wide range of different devices that does not really work. E.g. what to do if you have adc0 and dac0 as aliases for different devices. So you'd need a different way to expose the alias. Some bindings also use the "label" property to assign a unique name to node. But again the same issue how to expose that information to applications. - Lars -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-iio" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html