Re: [RFC PATCH 0/9] Add support for Microsoft Surface System Aggregator Module

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On 9/24/20 10:26 AM, Arnd Bergmann wrote:
On Thu, Sep 24, 2020 at 1:28 AM Maximilian Luz <luzmaximilian@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:
On 9/23/20 9:43 PM, Arnd Bergmann wrote:
On Wed, Sep 23, 2020 at 5:43 PM Maximilian Luz <luzmaximilian@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:

On 9/23/20 5:30 PM, Arnd Bergmann wrote:
On Wed, Sep 23, 2020 at 5:15 PM Maximilian Luz <luzmaximilian@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:

Hello,

The Surface System Aggregator Module (we'll refer to it as Surface
Aggregator or SAM below) is an embedded controller (EC) found on various
Microsoft Surface devices. Specifically, all 4th and later generation
Surface devices, i.e. Surface Pro 4, Surface Book 1 and later, with the
exception of the Surface Go series and the Surface Duo. Notably, it
seems like this EC can also be found on the ARM-based Surface Pro X [1].

I think this should go to drivers/platform/x86 or drivers/platform/surface/
along with other laptop vendor specific code rather than drivers/misc/.

I initially had this under drivers/platform/x86. There are two main
reasons I changed that: First, I think it's a bit too big for
platform/x86 given that it basically introduces a new subsystem. At this
point it's really less of "a couple of odd devices here and there" and
more of a bus-type thing. Second, with the possibility of future support
for ARM devices (Pro X, Pro X 2 which is rumored to come out soon), I
thought that platform/x86 would not be a good fit.

I don't see that as a strong reason against it. As you write yourself, the
driver won't work on the arm machines without major changes anyway,
and even if it does, it fits much better with the rest of it.

Sorry, I should have written that a bit more clearly. I don't see any
reason why these drivers would not work on an ARM device such as the Pro
X right now, assuming that it boots via ACPI and the serial device it
loads against is fully functional.

As I understand, the dialect of ACPI used on the snapdragon laptops
is not really compatible with the subset expected by the kernel, so
you'd be more likely to run those laptops with a device tree description
of the hardware instead (if at all).

Making the driver talk to the hardware directly instead of going through
AML likely requires more refactoring.

Oh, I did not know that! Thanks!

I'd be happy to move this to platform/surface though, if that's
considered a better fit and you're okay with me adding that. Would make
sense given that there's already a platform/chrome, which, as far as I
can tell, also seems to be mainly focused on EC support.

Yes, I think the main question is how much overlap you see functionally
between this driver and the others in drivers/platform/x86.

I think that the Pro X likely won't be the last ARM Surface device with
a SAM EC. Further, the subsystem is going to grow, and platform/x86
seems more like a collection of, if at all, loosely connected drivers,
which might give off the wrong impression. In my mind, this is just a
bit more comparable to platform/chrome than the rest of platform/x86. I
don't think I'm really qualified to make the decision on that though,
that's just my opinion.

I would ask the drivers/platform/x86 maintainers for an opinion here,
they are probably best qualified to make that decision.

I don't really mind either way, for me this is more about who is
responsible as a subsystem maintainer than whether these are
technically x86 or not.

I see, okay. I'll ask them and CC them on the next submission.

Here's an overview of other drivers that I hopefully at some point get
in good enough shape, which are part of this subsystem/dependent on the
EC API introduced here:

- A device registry / device hub for devices that are connected to the
    EC but can't be detected via ACPI.

- A dedicated battery driver for 7th generation devices (where the
    battery isn't hanled via the ACPI shim).

- A driver properly handling clipboard detachment on the Surface Books.

- A driver for HID input/transport on the Surface Laptops and Surface
    Book 3.

- A driver for allowing users to set the performance/cooling mode via
    sysfs.

- Possibly a driver improving hot-plug handling of the discrete GPU in
    the Surface Book base.

Note that drivers that connect to the bus typically don't live in the
same subdirectory as the driver that operates the bus. E.g. the
battery driver would go into drivers/power/supply and the input
would go into drivers/input/ or drivers/hid.

Right. I wonder if this also holds for devices that are directly
dependent on a special platform though? It could make sense to have them
under plaform/surface rather than in the individual subsystems as they
are only ever going to be used on this platform. On the other hand, one
could argue that having them in the subsystem directories is better for
maintainability.

Thanks,
Max



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