On Tue, Oct 29, 2024 at 4:19 AM Dirk Behme <dirk.behme@xxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > On 29.10.2024 09:50, Danilo Krummrich wrote: > > On Tue, Oct 29, 2024 at 08:20:55AM +0100, Dirk Behme wrote: > >> On 28.10.2024 11:19, Danilo Krummrich wrote: > >>> On Thu, Oct 24, 2024 at 11:11:50AM +0200, Dirk Behme wrote: > >>>>> +/// IdTable type for platform drivers. > >>>>> +pub type IdTable<T> = &'static dyn kernel::device_id::IdTable<of::DeviceId, T>; > >>>>> + > >>>>> +/// The platform driver trait. > >>>>> +/// > >>>>> +/// # Example > >>>>> +/// > >>>>> +///``` > >>>>> +/// # use kernel::{bindings, c_str, of, platform}; > >>>>> +/// > >>>>> +/// struct MyDriver; > >>>>> +/// > >>>>> +/// kernel::of_device_table!( > >>>>> +/// OF_TABLE, > >>>>> +/// MODULE_OF_TABLE, > >>>> > >>>> It looks to me that OF_TABLE and MODULE_OF_TABLE are quite generic names > >>>> used here. Shouldn't they be somehow driver specific, e.g. OF_TABLE_MYDRIVER > >>>> and MODULE_OF_TABLE_MYDRIVER or whatever? Same for the other > >>>> examples/samples in this patch series. Found that while using the *same* > >>>> somewhere else ;) > >>> > >>> I think the names by themselves are fine. They're local to the module. However, > >>> we stringify `OF_TABLE` in `module_device_table` to build the export name, i.e. > >>> "__mod_of__OF_TABLE_device_table". Hence the potential duplicate symbols. > >>> > >>> I think we somehow need to build the module name into the symbol name as well. > >> > >> Something like this? > > > > No, I think we should just encode the Rust module name / path, which should make > > this a unique symbol name. > > > > diff --git a/rust/kernel/device_id.rs b/rust/kernel/device_id.rs > > index 5b1329fba528..63e81ec2d6fd 100644 > > --- a/rust/kernel/device_id.rs > > +++ b/rust/kernel/device_id.rs > > @@ -154,7 +154,7 @@ macro_rules! module_device_table { > > ($table_type: literal, $module_table_name:ident, $table_name:ident) => { > > #[rustfmt::skip] > > #[export_name = > > - concat!("__mod_", $table_type, "__", stringify!($table_name), "_device_table") > > + concat!("__mod_", $table_type, "__", module_path!(), "_", stringify!($table_name), "_device_table") > > ] > > static $module_table_name: [core::mem::MaybeUninit<u8>; $table_name.raw_ids().size()] = > > unsafe { core::mem::transmute_copy($table_name.raw_ids()) }; > > > > For the doctests for instance this > > > > "__mod_of__OF_TABLE_device_table" > > > > becomes > > > > "__mod_of__doctests_kernel_generated_OF_TABLE_device_table". > > > What implies *one* OF/PCI_TABLE per path (file)? It's generally one per module, but it's one per type because it is one type per driver. So platform (and most other) drivers can have $bus, DT, and ACPI tables. While you could have 1 module with N drivers, I don't think I've ever seen that case and certainly not something we'd encourage. Perhaps it is just not possible to disallow in C, but we can in rust? That may be a benefit, not a limitation. Rob