Hi Jonathan, On Tue, 20 May 2008 11:04:01 +0100, Jonathan Cameron wrote: > This email is basically a request for opinions on how and where such sensors > should be integrated into the kernel. > > To set the scene... > > Increasing numbers of embedded devices are being supplied attached MEMS > devices (www.xbow.com imote2 etc). Along with more traditional sensors such > as ADC's not being used for hardware monitoring, these do not really > seem to > fit with in an particular subsystem of the kernel. A previous > discussion on > lkml in 2006 considered the accelerometers to be found within some laptop > hard drives, but I haven't been able to track down any more general > discussions > of such non hardware monitoring sensors. > > The obvious possibilities are: > > * To place the various drivers within the spi / i2c etc subsystems as > relevant. Bad idea. Grouping drivers by connectivity is almost always the wrong thing to do, as it means that different persons will maintain them and they have all chances to diverge. You really want to group drivers by functionality. On top of that, I am busy enough maintaining the i2c core and bus drivers without having more i2c device drivers added to my plate. These days I am trying to _empty_ drivers/i2c/chips, if anything. > * To place within the hwmon subsystem as this is probably closest. > (there is already at least one straight ADC driver in hwmon) Probably not the wisest choice, if nothing else, because the hwmon maintainer is already overloaded. And I don't think that these devices have much in common with the traditional hardware monitoring components anyway. I'm not sure what "straight ADC driver" you are referring to, but anything which measures a voltage and exports the reading to user-space is, well, a voltage sensor, and thus fix within hwmon. If the same chip is used for a higher-level, dedicated function then we would probably have a separate driver for it, outside of hwmon. > * To create a new subsystem, or perhaps merely sysfs class to contain these > elements. Would be OK. Or: * Place these within the input subsystem. You might want to discuss this with the input subsystem maintainer Dmitry Torokhov (Cc'd). The Wii remote is essentially a joystick, and joysticks belong to the input subsystem. > Typical requirements within an application include simply polling for > current > readings, and using device triggered interrupts to grab data > continuously to a > ring buffer, for collection by suitable userspace code. Obviously it > would be > desirable to standardize sysfs controls for various calibration > parameters as > much as possible across the various devices. > > Any other suggestions welcome! This all sounds quite different from our hwmon drivers. Our hwmon drivers read all the sensor values at once and cache the readings for a couple seconds, so you can't get an instant reading at any time, and they also don't support interrupts in general. -- Jean Delvare