Hi Jonathan, > Am 23.10.2016 um 21:00 schrieb Jonathan Cameron <jic23@xxxxxxxxxx>: > > On 23/10/16 19:34, H. Nikolaus Schaller wrote: >> Hi Jonathan, >> >>> Am 23.10.2016 um 11:57 schrieb H. Nikolaus Schaller <hns@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>: >>> >>> Hi, >>> >>>>> +static int tsc2007_alloc(struct i2c_client *client, struct tsc2007 **ts, >>>>> + struct input_dev **input_dev) >>>>> +{ >>>>> + int err; >>>>> + struct iio_dev *indio_dev; >>>>> + >>>>> + indio_dev = devm_iio_device_alloc(&client->dev, sizeof(*ts)); >>>> Instead of doing this to reduce the delta between versions make >>>> iio_priv a struct tsc2007 ** >>>> >>>> That is have a single pointer in there and do your allocation of struct >>>> tsc2007 separately. >>> >>> Sorry, but I think I do not completely understand what you mean here. >>> >>> The problem is that we need to allocate some struct tsc2007 in both cases. >>> But in one case managed directly by &client->dev and in the other managed >>> indirectly. This is why I use the private area of struct iio_dev to store >>> the full struct tsc2007 and not just a pointer. >> >> Ok, I think I finally did understand how you mean this and have started to >> implement something. >> > oops. Didn't look on in my emails to get to this one! >> The idea is to have one alloc function to return a struct tsc2007. This >> can be part of the probe function, like it is in the unpatched driver. >> >> In case of iio this struct tsc2007 is also allocated explicitly so that >> a pointer can be stored in iio_priv. >> >> This just means an additional iio_priv->ts = devm_kzalloc() in case of iio. >> >> I have added that approach to my inlined patch and it seems to work (attached). >> >> Sorry if I do not use the wording you would use and sometimes overlook >> something you have said. I feel here like moving on thin ice and doing >> guesswork about unspoken assumptions... > That's fine. Stuff that can appear obvious to one person is not > necessarily obvious to another! >> >>> >>>> >>>> Having doing that, you can have this CONFIG_IIO block as just >>>> doing the iio stuff with the input elements pulled back into the main >>>> probe function. >>>> >>>> Then define something like >>>> >>>> iio_configure (stubbed to nothing if no IIO) >>>> and >>>> iio_unconfigure (also stubbed to nothing if no IIO). >> >> This seems to work (draft attached). >> >>>> >>>> A couple of additions in the header >> >> I think you mean tsc2007.h? > Nope. A local header alongside the driver is what you want for this stuff. > driver/input/tsc2007.h >> >> This currently contains only platform data and could IMHO be eliminated >> if everything becomes DT. >> >>>> to make it all work >>>> (the struct tsc2007 and tsc2007_xfer() + a few of the >>>> register defines.. >> >> Here it appears to me that I have to make a lot of so far private static >> and even static inline functions public so that I can make them stubs and >> call them from tsc2007_iio.c. > There will be a few. >> >> And for having proper parameter types I have to make most private structs >> also public. > Yes a few of those as well. >> >> I really like the idea to have the optional iio feature in a separate source >> file, but when really starting to write code, I get the impression that >> it introduces more problems than it solves. >> >> And I wonder a little why it is not done for #ifdef CONFIG_OF in tsc2007.c >> as well. There are also two static function in some #ifdef #else # endif >> and not going through stubs. > Usually it is only done once a certain volume of code exists. >> >> So is this intended to give up some static definitions? > Yes, that happens the moment you have multiple source files. > > Some losses but generally end up with clean code separation. Always a trade > off unfortunately. Pity we can't just insist IIO is available! Rather large > to pull in for what is probable a niche use case. > > Below is definitely heading in the right direction. I remember vaguely being > convinced of the worth of doing this when optional code is involved! > (was a good while ago now) > > Jonathan >> >> BR and thanks, >> Nikolaus >> >> diff --git a/drivers/input/touchscreen/tsc2007.c b/drivers/input/touchscreen/tsc2007.c >> index 5e3c4bf..92da8f6 100644 >> --- a/drivers/input/touchscreen/tsc2007.c >> +++ b/drivers/input/touchscreen/tsc2007.c >> @@ -30,6 +30,7 @@ >> #include <linux/of.h> >> #include <linux/of_gpio.h> >> #include <linux/input/touchscreen.h> >> +#include <linux/iio/iio.h> > Should not need this after introducing the new file. Will only be > needed in the iio specific .c file. >> >> #define TSC2007_MEASURE_TEMP0 (0x0 << 4) >> #define TSC2007_MEASURE_AUX (0x2 << 4) >> @@ -98,6 +99,9 @@ struct tsc2007 { > This will definitely need to go in the header though. Now I have split the code into: tsc2007.h (constants, structs and stubs) tsc2007_iio.c (the iio stuff) tsc2007.c (most parts of the original driver) but I have a problem of correctly modifying the Makefile. It currently looks like: obj-$(CONFIG_TOUCHSCREEN_TSC2007) += tsc2007.o obj-$(CONFIG_IIO) += tsc2007_iio.o We have configured CONFIG_TOUCHSCREEN_TSC2007=m and CONFIG_IIO=y. This obviously compiles tsc2007_iio.o into the kernel. This means that tsc2007_iio.o references tsc2007_xfer which is part of the module. I would like to get both linked into the module, but the iio part obviously only if CONFIG_IIO is defined (either -y or -m). How can I define this? Or can I define obj-$(CONFIG_TOUCHSCREEN_TSC2007) += tsc2007.o tsc2007_iio.o and embrace all code in tsc2007_iio with a big #ifdef CONFIG_IIO so that it is compiled into an empty object file in the non-iio case? BR and thanks, Nikolaus -- 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