Hi Dmitry, On 11/3/22 20:28, Dmitry Torokhov wrote: > Hi Hans, > > On Tue, Oct 25, 2022 at 02:29:28PM +0200, Hans de Goede wrote: >> On x86/ACPI platforms touchscreens mostly just work without needing any >> device/model specific configuration. But in some cases (mostly with Silead >> and Goodix touchscreens) it is still necessary to manually specify various >> touchscreen-properties on a per model basis. >> >> This is handled by drivers/platform/x86/touchscreen_dmi.c which contains >> a large list of per-model touchscreen properties which it attaches to the >> (i2c)device before the touchscreen driver's probe() method gets called. >> This means that ATM changing these settings requires recompiling the >> kernel. This makes figuring out what settings/properties a specific >> touchscreen needs very hard for normal users to do. >> >> Add a new, optional, settings_override string argument to >> touchscreen_parse_properties(), which takes a list of ; separated >> property-name=value pairs, e.g. : >> "touchscreen-size-x=1665;touchscreen-size-y=1140;touchscreen-swapped-x-y". >> >> This new argument can be used by drivers to implement a module option which >> allows users to easily specify alternative settings for testing. >> >> The 2 new touchscreen_property_read_u32() and >> touchscreen_property_read_bool() helpers are also exported so that >> drivers can use these to add settings-override support to the code >> for driver-specific properties. > > I totally understand the motivation for this, but I do not think that > having special handling for only touchscreen properties is the right > thing to do. I would very much prefer is we had a more generic approach > of adding/overriding properties (via an swnode?). I understand where you are coming from, but I suspect the devicetree folks are going to not like any generic solution for 2 reasons: 1. Allowing overriding devicetree properties like regulator voltage is a bad idea, granted users can already do this with a custom DTB, but that is a higher threshold to pass for a user then just adding something on the kernel cmdline 2. Devicetree supports devicetree-overlays and I expect the devicetree folks to steer people who want to override random devicetree properties in that direction (or in the direction of using a custom DTB) So the ACPI/x86 case really is somewhat special here and especially the silead touchscreens are special here. Normally all the settings we are talking here come from ACPI tables (or can directly be read from the touchscreen controller) and then messing with these settings would be a case of using an initrd with a custom ACPI DSDT, just like how on devicetree I think we would expect people to use a custom DTB and or a devicetree overlay. but because of this info lacking from the ACPI tables we have it hardcoded per 2-in-1/tablet model in: drivers/platform/x86/touchscreen_dmi.c The downside of this hardcoding is that testing new settings requires building a custom kernel, which is both not helpful for having a quick change settings -> test -> adjust settings cycle when trying to find the right settings for a new model as well as quite a steep hill to climb for novice users who want to get things to work on a new model. So I do believe that because of this the touchscreen properties or special in this case and a somewhat custom solution to allow setting just the touchscreen properties from the cmdline thus is justified. Also: 1. Having a mechanism specific to touchscreen properties is simpler (more KISS) then having to come up with some more complicated generic property override mechanism. 2. A touchscreen property specific mechanism is much less susceptible to being misused. Setting the touchscreen properties wrong cannot really result in any harm. OTOH setting the max / end-of charging voltage of a lipo cell to 4.6 volt (this is a real world example) is very much harmful. The lipo-cell max charge voltage is something which we in the sysfs interface deliberately disallow to be set any higher then the boot-time value (lower is allowed). Adding a generic cmdline mechanism for setting properties would allow overriding this. Regards, Hans