On Tue, May 16, 2017 at 5:51 PM, Christoph Hellwig <hch@xxxxxx> wrote: > On Tue, May 16, 2017 at 05:45:07PM +0200, Arnd Bergmann wrote: >> This looks really nice, but what is the long-term plan for the interface? >> Do you expect that we will eventually change all 700+ users of timer_list >> to the new type, or do we keep both variants around indefinitely to avoid >> having to do mass-conversions? > > I think we should eventually move everyone over, but it might take > some time. Ok. >> If we are going to touch them all in the end, we might want to think >> about other changes that could be useful here. The main one I have >> in mind would be moving away from 'jiffies + timeout' as the interface, >> and instead passing a relative number of milliseconds (or seconds) >> into a mod_timer() variant. This is what most drivers want anyway, >> and if we have both changes (callback argument and expiration >> time) in place, we modernize the API one driver at a time with both >> changes at once. > > Yes, that sounds useful to me as well. As you said it's an independent > but somewhat related change. I can add it to my series, but I'll > need a suggestions for a good and short name. That already was the > hardest part for the setup side :) If we keep the unusual *_timer() naming (rather than timer_*() as hrtimer has), we could use one of a) start_timer(struct timer_list *timer, unsigned long ms); b) restart_timer(struct timer_list *timer, unsigned long ms); c) mod_timer_ms(struct timer_list *timer, unsigned long ms); mod_timer_sec(struct timer_list *timer, unsigned long sec); The first is slightly shorter but conflicts with three files that use the same name for a local function name. The third one fits well with the existing interfaces and provides both millisecond and second versions, I'd probably go with that. We could consider even passing a default interval as another argument to prepare_timer(), and using that in add_timer(), but that would in those cases that have a constant interval (maybe about half of the users from) and would be a bit surprising to readers that are only familiar with the existing interfaces. One final option would be a larger-scale replacement of the API by mirroring the hrtimer style where possible while staying compatible with the existing calls, e.g. timer_prepare(), timer_add_expires(), timer_start(), ... Arnd -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-s390" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html