Hi Leon, On 12/6/20 8:07 AM, Leon Romanovsky wrote: > On Thu, Dec 03, 2020 at 10:26:31PM +0100, Maximilian Luz wrote: >> Hello, >> >> Here is version two of the Surface System Aggregator Module (SAM/SSAM) >> driver series, adding initial support for the embedded controller on 5th >> and later generation Microsoft Surface devices. Initial support includes >> the ACPI interface to the controller, via which battery and thermal >> information is provided on some of these devices. >> >> The previous version and cover letter detailing what this series is >> about can be found at >> >> https://lore.kernel.org/platform-driver-x86/20201115192143.21571-1-luzmaximilian@xxxxxxxxx/ >> >> This patch-set can also be found at the following repository and >> reference, if you prefer to look at a kernel tree instead of these >> emails: >> >> https://github.com/linux-surface/kernel tags/s/surface-aggregator/v2 >> >> Thank you all for the feedback to v1, I hope I have addressed all >> comments. > > > I think that it is too far fetched to attempt and expose UAPI headers > for some obscure char device that we are all know won't be around in > a couple of years from now due to the nature of how this embedded world > works. This is not for an embedded device, but for the popular line of Microsoft Surface laptops / 2-in-1s... > More on that, the whole purpose of proposed interface is to debug and > not intended to be used by any user space code. The purpose is to provide raw access to the Surface Serial Hub protocol, just like we provide raw access to USB devices and have hidraw devices. So this goes a litle beyond just debugging; and eventually the choice may be made to implement some functionality with userspace drivers, just like we do for some HID and USB devices. Still I agree with you that adding new userspace API is something which needs to be considered carefully. So I will look at this closely when reviewing this set. > Also the idea that you are creating new bus just for this device doesn't > really sound right. I recommend you to take a look on auxiliary bus and > use it or come with very strong justifications why it is not fit yet. AFAIK the auxiliary bus is for sharing a single device between multiple drivers, while the main device-driver also still offers functionality (beyond the providing of access) itself. This is more akin to how the WMI driver also models different WMI functions as a bus + devices on the bus. Or how the SDIO driver multiplex a single SDIO device into its functions by again using a bus + devices on the bus model. Also this has been in the works for quite a while now, the Linux on Microsoft Surface devices community has been working on this out of tree for a long time, see: https://github.com/linux-surface/ And an RFC and a v1 have been posted a while ago, while auxiliary bus support is not even in the mainline kernel yet. I would agree with you that this should switch to auxiliary bus, despite the timing, if that would lead to much better code. But ATM I don't really see switching to auxiliary bus offering much benefits here. > I'm sorry to say, but this series is not ready to be merged yet. > > NAK: Leon Romanovsky <leon@xxxxxxxxxx> See above, I believe that this all is a bit harsh and I have not really heard convincing arguments for not merging this. Moreover such a quick nack does not really promote working upstream, where as we actually want people to work upstream as much as possible. I know this is not a reason for taking bad code, but I'm not convinced that this is bad code. I have not reviewed this myself yet, but once I have reviewed this and any review remarks have been addressed I do expect to merge this series through the platform-drivers-x86 tree. Regards, Hans de Goede (drivers/platform/x86 and drivers/platform/surface subsys maintainer)