Hi Andy, finally I found some time to get back to this one. For anyhting I didn't comment on, it means I am okay with your suggestion. Thanks for the review! > 'For ACPI one may use PRP0001 approach with the following ASL excerpt example:: > > Device (GSLA) { > Name (_HID, "PRP0001") > Name (_DDN, "GPIO sloppy logic analyzer") > Name (_CRS, ResourceTemplate () { > GpioIo(Exclusive, PullNone, 0, 0, IoRestrictionNone, > "\\_SB.PCI0.GPIO", 0, ResourceConsumer, , ) { 13 } > PinConfig(Exclusive, 0x07, 0, "\\_SB.PCI0.GPIO", 0, ResourceConsumer, ) { 7 } > GpioIo(Exclusive, PullNone, 0, 0, IoRestrictionNone, > "\\_SB.PCI0.GPIO", 0, ResourceConsumer, , ) { 12 } > PinConfig(Exclusive, 0x07, 0, "\\_SB.PCI0.GPIO", 0, ResourceConsumer, ) { 6 } > }) > > Name (_DSD, Package () { > ToUUID("daffd814-6eba-4d8c-8a91-bc9bbf4aa301"), > Package () { > Package () { "compatible", Package () { "gpio-sloppy-logic-analyzer" } }, > Package () { > "probe-gpios", Package () { > ^GSLA, 0, 0, 0, > ^GSLA, 1, 0, 0, > }, > Package () { > "probe-names", Package () { > "SCL", > "SDA", > }, > } > }) > > Note, that pin configuration uses pin numbering space, while GPIO resources > are in GPIO numbering space, which may be different in ACPI. In other words, > there is no guarantee that GPIO and pins are mapped 1:1, that's why there are > two different pairs in the example, i.e. {13,12} GPIO vs. {7,6} pin. > > Yet pin configuration support in Linux kernel is subject to implement.' Have you tested this snippet? I am totally open to add ACPI but it should be tested, of course. Is there any on-going effort to add ACPI pin config? > > + * Copyright (C) Wolfram Sang <wsa@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> > > + * Copyright (C) Renesas Electronics Corporation > > No years? After reading this*, I agreed they are not really needed. * https://www.linuxfoundation.org/blog/copyright-notices-in-open-source-software-projects/ > > +#define GPIO_LA_MAX_PROBES 8 > > +#define GPIO_LA_NUM_TESTS 1024 > > I prefer TAB indentation of the values for better reading, but it's up to you. I don't ;) > > + struct debugfs_blob_wrapper meta; > > + unsigned long gpio_acq_delay; > > + struct device *dev; > > > + unsigned int trig_len; > > On 64-bit arch you may save 4 bytes by moving this to be together with u32 > member above. I don't want to save bytes here. I sorted the struct for cachelines, important members first. > > +static struct dentry *gpio_la_poll_debug_dir; > > I have seen the idea of looking up the debugfs entry. That said, do we actually > need this global variable? I don't understand the first sentence. And we still need it to clean up? > > + /* '10' is length of 'probe00=\n\0' */ > > + add_len = strlen(gpio_names[i]) + 10; > > + meta = devm_krealloc(dev, meta, meta_len + add_len, GFP_KERNEL); > > First of all, this realloc() pattern *) is bad. While it's tricky and has side > effects (i.e. it has no leaks) better not to use it to avoid confusion. > > *) foo = realloc(foo, ...); is 101 mistake. Because generally you lose the old pointer on error. But we don't here because we are using managed devices. However, I see that all kernel users of devm_krealloc() are using a seperate variable and then update the old one. I can do this, too. > But second, all your use is based on: > - all strings are of equal lengths They are not. The gpio names come from the user via DT or ACPI and can have an arbitrary length. > > + [ ! -d $CPUSETDIR ] && mkdir $CPUSETDIR > > [ -d ... ] || ... Will think about it. I think the former is a tad more readable. > > + # Check if we could parse something and the channel number fits > > + [ $chan != $c -a $chan -le $MAX_CHANS ] 2> /dev/null || { echo "Syntax error: $c" && exit 1; } > > Why 2>/dev/null ? I forgot, have to recheck. > > +[ $SAMPLEFREQ -eq 0 ] && > > echo "Invalid sample frequency" && exit 1 > > This kind of stuff deserves an exit function, like I'll think about it! All the best, Wolfram
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