On Fri, Oct 13, 2023 at 03:58:30PM +0100, Sean Young wrote: > On Fri, Oct 13, 2023 at 01:51:40PM +0200, Thierry Reding wrote: > > On Fri, Oct 13, 2023 at 11:46:14AM +0100, Sean Young wrote: > > [...] > > > diff --git a/include/linux/pwm.h b/include/linux/pwm.h > > > index d2f9f690a9c1..93f166ab03c1 100644 > > > --- a/include/linux/pwm.h > > > +++ b/include/linux/pwm.h > > > @@ -267,6 +267,7 @@ struct pwm_capture { > > > * @get_state: get the current PWM state. This function is only > > > * called once per PWM device when the PWM chip is > > > * registered. > > > + * @atomic: can the driver execute pwm_apply_state in atomic context > > > * @owner: helps prevent removal of modules exporting active PWMs > > > */ > > > struct pwm_ops { > > > @@ -278,6 +279,7 @@ struct pwm_ops { > > > const struct pwm_state *state); > > > int (*get_state)(struct pwm_chip *chip, struct pwm_device *pwm, > > > struct pwm_state *state); > > > + bool atomic; > > > struct module *owner; > > > }; > > > > As I mentioned earlier, this really belongs in struct pwm_chip rather > > than struct pwm_ops. I know that Uwe said this is unlikely to happen, > > and that may be true, but at the same time it's not like I'm asking > > much. Whether you put this in struct pwm_ops or struct pwm_chip is > > about the same amount of code, and putting it into pwm_chip is much > > more flexible, so it's really a no-brainer. > > Happy to change this of course. I changed it and then changed it back after > Uwe's comment, I'll fix this in the next version. > > One tiny advantage is that pwm_ops is static const while pwm_chip is > allocated per-pwm, so will need instructions for setting the value. Having > said that, the difference is tiny, it's a single bool. Yeah, it's typically a single assignment, so from a code point of view it should be pretty much the same. I suppose from an instruction level point of view, yes, this might add a teeny-tiny bit of overhead. On the other hand it lets us do interesting things like initialize chip->atomic = !regmap_might_sleep() for those drivers that use regmap and then not worry about it any longer. Given that, I'm also wondering if we should try to keep the terminology a bit more consistent. "Atomic" is somewhat overloaded because ->apply() and ->get_state() are part of the "atomic" PWM API (in the sense that applying changes are done as a single, atomic operation, rather than in the sense of "non-sleeping" operation). So pwm_apply_state_atomic() is then doubly atomic, which is a bit weird. On the other hand it's a bit tedious to convert all existing users to pwm_apply_state_might_sleep(). Perhaps as a compromise we can add pwm_apply_state_might_sleep() and make pwm_apply_state() a (deprecated) alias for that, so that existing drivers can be converted one by one. Eventually we would then end up with both pwm_apply_state_might_sleep() and pwm_apply_state_atomic(), which has the nice side-effect of these being unambiguous. That doesn't get rid of the ambiguity of that _atomic() suffix, but I can probably live with that one. It's used for this same meaning in other contexts and if we add a _might_sleep() variant it becomes clearer how the two are different. Anyway, the bottom line is that I'd prefer the "atomic" field to be renamed "might_sleep". It'd also be nice to add the new _might_sleep() variant since you're already changing all of this anyway. No need to mass-convert all the drivers to the _might_sleep() variant yet, though, since we can have a transitional alias for that. Of course feel free to give it a shot if you feel like it. Thierry
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