On 15/11/06, William D Waddington <[email protected]> wrote:
I tried submitting a patch a while back:
"[PATCH] IRQ: ease out-of-tree migration to new irq_handler prototype"
to add #define __PT_REGS to include/linux/interrupt.h to flag the change
to the new interrupt handler prototype. It wasn't well received :(
No big surprise. The #define wasn't my idea and I hadn't submitted a
patch before. I wanted to see how the patch procedure worked, and
hoped that the flag would be included so I could mod my drivers and
move on...
What I'm curious about is why flagging kernel/driver interface changes
is considered a bad idea. From my point of view as a low-life out-of-
tree driver maintainer,
#ifdef NEW_INTERFACE
#define <my new internals>
#endif
(w/maybe an #else...)
is cleaner and safer than trying to track specific kernel versions in
a multi-kernel-version driver. It seems that in some cases, the new
interface has been, like HAVE_COMPAT_IOCTL for instance.
I don't want to start an argument about "stable_api_nonsense" or the
wisdom of out-of-tree drivers. Just curious about the - why - and
whether it is indifference or antagonism toward drivers outside the
fold. Or ???
I would say that one reason is that cluttering up the kernel with
#ifdef's is ugly and annoying to maintain long-term. Especially when
it's expected that anyone who changes in-kernel interfaces also fix up
any user(s) of those interfaces, so the #ifdef's are pointless
(ignoring out-of-tree code that is).
--
Jesper Juhl <[email protected]>
Don't top-post http://www.catb.org/~esr/jargon/html/T/top-post.html
Plain text mails only, please http://www.expita.com/nomime.html
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