On Sun, 2006-11-12 at 15:39 -0800, Ben Collins wrote:
> This email brought to you by Sunday afternoon coding frustration.
>
> As I move forward with Ubuntu's next release, I keep running into very
> familiar problems, more and more often. The issues stem from userspace
> not having enough control over what the kernel decides to do with a
> device, and possible drivers to bind it with.
>
> Here's a common case I'm trying to address:
>
> Driver foo supports devices a, b
> Driver bar supports devices b, c
>
> For devices 'a' and 'c', the answer is simple. The correct driver always
> gets loaded. However, the answer is not always simple for device 'b'. At
> first glance, you could assume that either driver would be correct, but
> that's wrong.
>
> There's two main reasons why foo and bar may not be interchangeable for
> device 'b'.
>
> First, foo may not work correctly with all variations of device 'b', and
> the same for driver bar. Since driver loading and binding only works
> based on the identity 'b', there's no more information to base the
> decision on, other than the user deciding it for us.
>
> Secondly, foo and bar may be different ways of handling the same device.
> An example that comes to mind is a bt878 chipset where the audio portion
> can be handled by a media driver or a sound driver. The user has to
> decide which driver they want handling that device based on how they use
> it.
>
> So this then becomes a decision that the kernel cannot make. As a
> distro, we have to provide both drivers, but the endless support for
> people who have broken systems because driver foo doesn't work with
> their device, or because driver foo doesn't use their device in the way
> they want, are having to be told to blacklist foo so bar will be used.
>
> I don't think blacklisting is very ideal. For example let's say they
> have device 'a' and 'b'. Since 'a' needs foo, we then need to tell them
> how to make sure bar gets loaded first (usually by force loading rather
> than the tidy udev handling) so that their 'b' device binds with it
> first.
>
> If this is a hot-pluggable device, they're just fucked. If both drivers
> are already loaded into the kernel, userspace has no control over which
> one the kernel decides to bind with, and the kernel doesn't have all the
> info needed.
>
> Either way, we've butchered their system to work around a lack of
> functionality. Upgrades are likely going to be broken, or become
> difficult, etc.
>
> So my ultimate goal is to somehow move this decision making to udev. My
> plan is something along these lines:
>
> - udev is started, and if it supports this new model, somehow tells the
> driver core to disable its internal binding of drivers.
>
> - udev gets notification of new device
>
> - udev loads all drivers capable of handling device (if it doesn't
> support this new model, then it works like it used to, and the next step
> is skipped).
>
> - udev checks it's rules, if a specific driver is requested for a
> device, emit a sysfs write to bind with it. If no driver specific
> request is made, then emit an "any" bind, to let the kernel do whatever
> it wants.
>
> Internally in the kernel, binding would still be enforced by driver core
> matching/probing. The above setup would also intermix well with udev
> rules that forced binding (e.g. new_id for PCI drivers/devices).
>
> What I haven't done is figure out what this interface between udev and
> driver core will look like.
>
> Comments welcome. And if there's already a clean way to do this that I
> just don't know about, please kick me toward it.
>
What's wrong with making udev or whatever unbind driver A and then bind
driver B if the driver bound by the kernel ends up being the wrong
choice? (Besides the inelegance of the kernel choosing one and then
userspace immediately choosing the other, of course.)
I'd argue that having multiple drivers for the same hardware is a bit
strange to begin with, but that's another issue entirely.
--
Nicholas Miell <[email protected]>
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