On Tue, Mar 17, 2015 at 09:46:13PM +0000, Malte Vesper wrote: > > > On 17/03/15 21:13, Greg KH wrote: > >On Tue, Mar 17, 2015 at 08:43:38PM +0000, Malte Vesper wrote: > >>Hi, > >>I am trying to write a driver that uses the MINOR(dev_t) to identify > >>cards. Since it is a PCI driver and I get pcidev->dev.dev_t anyway. I > >>thought about not bothering to store the minor number of the device. > >>However if I look at pcidev->dev.dev_t in the remove function (the > >>driver frameworks remove), I always get pcidev->dev.dev_t == 0. > >That dev_t is not for your use, sorry, it is for the driver core to use, > >if it needs/wants to for a class device. A PCI driver should never need > >to be a char device, but if it does, you have to make your own calls to > >the character device core. > > > >What type of PCI device is this? Why do you want to have a character > >device node for it? > > > >thanks, > > > >greg k-h > I want to do stream processing with a FPGA. I hoped that I could read the > minor from that field after calling device_create(). Yes, you can, but that's not what your pci device uses, you have to create your own device to be able to use that. And your driver should never need/care about what the minor number really is if you write it correctly :) > As for the streaming bit the intended mode of operation is send a chunk, > receive a processed chunk. Since the FPGA might do filtering the result > might be smaller. > Also there is no random access, and once a bit of the returned data has been > read, it can not be read again. The FPGA is more or less passthrough with > some FIFO buffers. Then why not just use the firmware interface for this instead? > This use model and other examples (there are a few PCIe FPGA drivers out > there which do char device (i.e. Riffa)), led me to pick a char device. > Either way, the actual data transfer is handled solely by the device acting > as a bus master (DMA). > > Would you still recommend a block device driver type? Firmware :) > Is there an elegant way to get back at the MINOR() without storing it i.e. > in the private data field (pci_set_drvdata). Why do you need to know the minor? And again, please keep your pci device separate from anything that you try to create. You don't own the lifecycle of the pci device, the pci core does. Also, there's a long-standing discussion of a "real" fpga kernel interface on the linux-kernel mailing list. I suggest reading the archives for it, and joining if you want to help create something that works for your card. thanks, greg k-h _______________________________________________ Kernelnewbies mailing list Kernelnewbies@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx http://lists.kernelnewbies.org/mailman/listinfo/kernelnewbies