On 06/11/2008 05:39 PM, Oliver Neukum wrote:
Am Mittwoch 11 Juni 2008 16:13:43 schrieb Jiri Kosina:
On Mon, 9 Jun 2008, Jiri Slaby wrote:
static const struct hid_device_id hid_blacklist[] = {
+ { HID_USB_DEVICE(USB_VENDOR_ID_LOGITECH,
USB_DEVICE_ID_MX3000_RECEIVER) },
+ { HID_USB_DEVICE(USB_VENDOR_ID_LOGITECH, USB_DEVICE_ID_S510_RECEIVER)
},
+ { HID_USB_DEVICE(USB_VENDOR_ID_LOGITECH,
USB_DEVICE_ID_S510_RECEIVER_2) },
{ }
};
This shouldn't be needed as soon as the userspace supports the proper module
autoloading, right?
This is needed to tell generic drivers not to bind these, its' generic
blacklist. I have no idea how this could be done better with current
drivers/base/.
Hmm ... but if we make sure that the order in `modules.order' puts all the
specialized drivers before the generic one, the binding should be done
correctly even without blacklist, right?
No. You might have two devices connected. The first correctly triggers
the loading of the generic driver. The second would first load the specialised
driver but the already loaded driver will be faster.
Hm, the problem here is, that report (supported inputs et al.) parsing needs to
be done some time. Since some devices have reports broken too, some of their
reports need to be fixed before parsing. So the parsing is postponed after
*first* driver binds, then it's checked if the coming driver has report_fixup
hook and if yes, it's executed and the device is finally parsed and set up. If
it has not (e.g. generic), it's just parsed and set up.
If you bind the generic driver as the first driver and the particular device
needs report fixing, it never performs the fixup. Actually what I don't know is
how to solve this effectively.
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