Hi,
On 10/24/06, David Zeuthen <[email protected]> wrote:
How do we plan to get updates to user space?
There was a long LKML thread ("Generic battery interface") about this in July.
This a general issue in sysfs, applicably whenever sysfs is used to
communicate device data (as opposed to system configuration). We need
a generic solution. Here are a few of the considerations that came up
in that thread:
- Efficiency on both poll-based and event-based hardware data sources.
- Avoiding unnecessary timer interrupts on tickless kernels.
- Letting multiple userspace clients poll the same data source at
different rates, without causing duplicate queries or unnecessary
process wakeups.
- Avoiding duplicate queries on poll-based hardware that provides
several attributes simultaneously.
Here's my latest proposed solution in that thread (but see the dozens
of messages before and after for context...):
http://lkml.org/lkml/2006/7/30/193
The ACPI code today
provides updates via the ACPI socket but that is broken on some hardware
so essentially HAL polls by reading /proc/acpi/battery/BAT0/state some
every 30 secs on, and, on some boxen, that generates a SMBIOS trap or
some other expensive operation. That's wrong.
30 seconds? I've seen battery applets that poll 1sec intervals (that's
actually useful when you tweak power saving). And for things like the
hdaps accelerometer driver, we're at the 50HZ region.
So, perhaps the battery class should provide a file called 'timestamp'
or something that is only writable by the super user. If you read from
that file it gives the time when the information was last updated. If
you write to the file it will force the driver query the hardware and
update the other files. Reading any other file than 'timestamp' will
just read cached information.
The mechanism to notify user space that something have been updated
would be either to make the timestamp file pollable or use an uevent or
something else (no input drivers please).
If the hardware is able to generate an interrupt when certain data on
the battery has changed the driver simply updates the timestamp file.
With this scheme, user space simply does this
10 poll on /sys/class/battery/BAT0/timestamp with timeout=30sec
20 if timeout, write to 'timestamp' file to force polling
30 read values from sysfs and update graphics for battery icon etc.
40 goto 10
and we only poll when the hardware don't provide such interrupts /
hardware is broken so it don't provide interrupts.
Specifically, user space can decide to make the timeout infinite or
decide not to poll under certain conditions etc. etc.
This is a very interesting approach; I don't recall anything like this
from on the older thread.
There are a few problems though:
You can't require reading battery status to be a root-only operation.
When mutiple userspace apps poll the battery, you'll get race
conditions on timestamp, and even in the best case all the apps will
be woken up at the poll rate of the most-frequently-polling app (think
of that happening at 50HZ for hdaps...).
Shem
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