Hi Mauro, On Wed, Mar 25, 2020 at 10:38:20PM +0100, Mauro Carvalho Chehab wrote: > Em Wed, 25 Mar 2020 16:36:31 -0300 Helen Koike escreveu: > > On 3/25/20 1:03 PM, Mauro Carvalho Chehab wrote: > > > That's the second part of media Kconfig changes. The entire series is > > > at: > > > > > > https://git.linuxtv.org/mchehab/experimental.git/log/?h=media-kconfig > > > > I made a quick experiment (using this branch) with someone who works with the kernel for his master degree, but doesn't have much experience in kernel development in general. > > I asked him to enable Vimc (from default configs, where multimedia starts disabled). > > He knows that Vimc is a virtual camera driver, and this is how he behaved: > > > > === Start of experiment: > > > > * He pressed '/' and searched for vimc to see the location path. > > * Then he enabled "Multimedia support" and went straight to "Media drivers" (which just shows USB and PCI). > > * He went back to "Multimedia support", entered "Media device types" and enabled "Test drivers". > > * He went back to "Media drivers" again and didn't find Vimc (nothing changed in this menu). > > * He seemed a bit lost, going back and forth in the menus a couple of times. > > * Then he pressed '/' again to search for vimc and see the location path, and he realized that there > > should be an option called "V4L test drivers" under "Media drivers" that is not showing up. > > * He went back to "Media device types" again and start re-reading the options. > > * He selected "Cameras and video grabbers" ant went back to "Media drivers". > > * He sees "V4L test drivers", selects it, and enter this menu. > > * He selects "Virtual Media Controller Driver". > > > > I asked his impressions, and he mentioned that he thought that enabling just "Test drivers" would be enough, without need > > to combine "Test drivers" with "Cameras and video grabbers". > > He also asked me why virtual drivers should be hidden, and he mentioned that the word "Virtual" in front would be enough. > > > > Then I showed him he could have disabled the option "Filter devices by their types" to see everything at one (which he didn't > > realized by himself until that moment, nor tried it out to see what would happen). > > > > He mentioned that hiding is nice, because it shows less options, but not very nice to search for something. > > He also mentioned that if he had understood the filter mechanism from the start, he would have disabled "Filter devices by their types" sooner. > > That's easy to solve: all it needs is to add something similar > to this at drivers/media/Kconfig: > > + comment "Drivers are filtered by MEDIA_SUPPORT_FILTER" > + visible if MEDIA_SUPPORT_FILTER > + > + comment "All available drivers are shown below" > + visible if !MEDIA_SUPPORT_FILTER > + > menu "Media drivers" > > source "drivers/media/usb/Kconfig" > > > === End of experiment > > > > This was just one experiment from one person, I'll see if I can get some other people from lkcamp.dev group to also check > > and send us their impressions. I think it would be nice to get more data about user experience, from people that are not used to > > kernel development (kernel dev newbies for instance). > > > > Just another remark from me: > > > > From the default config, "Media drivers" shows USB and PCI, > > Well, assuming that there are 2 billion computers, 1% with Linux > installed, and 10% of them have a media device (camera or TV), > we have about 2 millions of people running Linux. That excludes > Android and Embedded devices, where people usually don't touch. > > During an entire year, there are about 4000 of Kernel developers > that has at least one patch accepted upstream (this number > includes developers for Android and other SoCs). Also, the > number of Kernel developers submitting patches upstream for the > media subsystem is around 20-40 people along an year. $ git log --since 2019-01-01 --until 2020-01-01 --no-merges -- drivers/media/ | grep '^Author: ' | sort | uniq -c | wc -l 215 There's some duplication of e-mail addresses, but it's still roughly an order or magnitude bigger (and it's not counting staging, headers or documentation). > So, about 99,9998% of the users using the media subsystems aren't > Kernel hackers. I bet that almost all of those will either need > to enable USB or a PCI driver. And the extremely vast majority of these will never enable a kernel option because they will never compile a kernel. They don't even know what a kernel is :-) > Granted, 99,9998% seems too optimistic, but, assuming that this > would reduce to something like 80% (e. g. only 200 users > would ever try to build a media driver, with is a *very conservative* > number) this is still a lot more than the number of media Kernel > developers. > > Also, a Kernel hacker will sooner or later find a way to enable it. > A normal user may find it a lot more trickier and will very likely > require more support, if the menus are too technical and the > default options are wrong. I'm not sure to follow you. Are you implying that this patch series, which Helen has tested against a real user, not an experienced kernel hacker, may make the configuration options more difficult for kernel hackers, but improves the situation for users ? > > - > > Even with that, based on your small experiment (of someone from the > area), I suspect that, if you had asked him to enable, for example, > em28xx or dvbsky (with are some of the most popular drivers > those days), he would be able to enable it a lot faster. This is the *only* real piece of evidence we have, let's not assume we know better. > > and selecting those doesn't do anything, and people can even think > > that, if they want to enable an USB device, just enabling the USB option there is enough (which is not), since no drivers > > shows up. > > It is hard to comment on individual experiments. In the past, our > Kconfig system were like that: written for technical people with > background on computer engineering and some experience building the > Kernel. > > E.g. people that knows that "/" activates a search mechanism at > the Kernel building system. > > We usually had to spend *a lot of time* both on IRC and on e-mail > explaining people that just want to have their card supported, > how to do that. After the reorg (with added those more user-faced > interfaces), the number of people with problems reduced a lot. Don't you think that could come mainly from better support for media devices in distributions ? > Btw, if one tries to compile from media-build (with lots of users > do), this is even more relevant. Can you quantify "lots of users" ? -- Regards, Laurent Pinchart