Hi, Thanks for your comments. Jean Delvare wrote: > Hi Nicolas, > > Sorry for the delay. > > On Wed, 14 Mar 2007 17:29:39 +0800, Nicolas Boichat wrote: >> I developed, a while ago, a driver the Apple System Management >> Controller, which provides an accelerometer (Apple Sudden Motion >> Sensor), light sensors, temperature sensors, keyboard backlight control >> and fan control on Intel-based Apple's computers (MacBook Pro, MacBook, >> MacMini). >> >> This patch has been tested successfully since kernel 2.6.18 (i.e. 3-4 >> months ago) by various users on different systems on the mactel-linux lists. >> >> However, I'm not really satisfied with the way sysfs files are created: >> I use a lot of preprocessor macros to avoid repetition of code. >> The files created with these macros in /sys/devices/platform/applesmc are >> the following (on a Macbook Pro): >> fan0_actual_speed >> fan0_manual >> fan0_maximum_speed >> fan0_minimum_speed >> fan0_safe_speed >> fan0_target_speed >> fan1_actual_speed >> fan1_manual >> fan1_maximum_speed >> fan1_minimum_speed >> fan1_safe_speed >> fan1_target_speed >> temperature_0 >> temperature_1 >> temperature_2 >> temperature_3 >> temperature_4 >> temperature_5 >> temperature_6 > > First of all, please read Documentation/hwmon/sysfs-documentation, and > rename the entries to match the standard names whenever possible. Also > make sure that you use the standard units. If you use the standard > names and units and if you register your device with the hwmon class, > standard monitoring application will be able to support your driver. Ok I'll have a look at this. >> (i.e. temperature_* is created by one macro, fan*_actual_speed by >> another, ...) >> Is it acceptable programming practice? Is there a way to create these >> files in a more elegant manner? > > Some old hardware monitoring drivers are still doing this, but this is > strongly discouraged for new drivers. It is possible (and easy) to > avoid using such macros, by sharing callback functions between various > sysfs files. > > This is done by using SENSOR_DEVICE_ATTR instead of DEVICE_ATTR to > declare the sysfs attributes. It takes an extra parameter, which is the > entry number/index. You retrieve that index in the callback function: > > static ssize_t show_temp(struct device *dev, struct device_attribute *devattr, > char *buf) > { > struct sensor_device_attribute *attr = to_sensor_dev_attr(devattr); > int nr = attr->index; > (...) > } > > Take a look at the hwmon/f71805f.c driver for examples. Yes I'm using something like this in the version that is in the -mm tree now. >> Also, I never call any sysfs_remove_* function, as the files are >> deleted when the module is unloaded. Is it safe to do so? Doesn't it >> cause any memory leak? > > This is considered a bad practice, as in theory you driver shouldn't > create the device by itself, and the files are associated to the device, > not the driver. All hardware monitoring drivers have been fixed now, so > please add the file removal calls in your driver too. You might find it > easier to use file groups rather than individual files. Again, see for > example the f71805f driver, and in particular the f71805f_attributes > array and f71805f_group structure, and the sysfs_create_group() and > sysfs_remove_group() calls. Ok I'll fix this. > I'm sorry but I really don't have the time for a complete review of > your driver. Your comments are already very valuable, thanks. Best regards, Nicolas