On Mon, Jul 02, 2018 at 01:13:40PM -0500, David Lechner wrote: >On 06/21/2018 04:06 PM, William Breathitt Gray wrote: >> I decided to strip down these devices to arrive at the core essence of >> what constitutes a "counter device" and therefore design a "generic >> counter" abstraction to better represent these devices and prevent the >> ambiguity we discovered with the existing IIO Counter interface. This >> abstraction became the Generic Counter paradigm, which is explained in >> detail within the Documentation/driver-api/generic-counter.rst file >> introduced by this patchset. > >I'm curious if you have given any thought to the time aspect of counters. >I am interested in the rate at which the counters are counting (e.g. how >many counts per second). I realize that you can calculate this in >userspace or in the kernel using the system timer, but it is not very >accurate since Linux is not a realtime OS. So, I would like to get the >rate directly from the hardware. For example, the TI eQEP[1], like the >one found in BeagleBones, has a couple ways of measuring time (see link >for details). > >[1]: http://www.ti.com/lit/ug/sprug05a/sprug05a.pdf Ah yes, I see you initially attempted adding a frequency channel type to the IIO code. I agree with you that this calculation is best kept away from the operating system, not just because of the realtime requirement considerations, but also because the hardware likely knows best its own data, so let's expose it! Regarding the Generic Counter interface, a frequency attribute can be added quite easily in a technical sense, so this discussion should be focused more on the warrant for exposing this data. I understand from the discussion thread on your initial patch submission that you're working with hot-swappable encoder wheels and would like to expose a counting rate since you have trouble otherwise knowing the number of counts equal to one revolution due to the various possible encoder wheels that could be installed -- do I understand this correctly? Luckily the Generic Counter interface is a more abstract paradigm, so the hot-swappable encoder wheels should not be a problem for us as long as we nail down a consistent and thorough definition for this attribute. To that end, since the Generic Counter paradigm is designed to abstract away specifics of counter devices in order to present the final data of interest to users (e.g. the count value, the mode of operation, etc.), let's make sure frequency is actually what we want to expose and not just a middle-step datum on the path to the final result. What is the real life use-case for this information (are you tracking position)? Does the relevant hardware report the number of counts equal to one revolution, or are you calculating this from frequency? Are you using this frequency to simply track the number of revolutions? Should revolution count also be exposed? Is frequency useful for other applications on its own (perhaps velocity of an automobile device equipped with an encoder wheel for some reason or other)? Once we figure out how this data is used, we can determine the best design and place to introduce it into the Generic Counter interface, then move on to integration from there. William Breathitt Gray -- 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