On 12/13/06, Andres Salomon <[email protected]> wrote:
Dmitry Torokhov wrote:
> Hi Andres,
[...]
>
> Unfortunately I do not think this is going to work well in in default case:
>
> 1. PS/2 probing order is important. You need to probe for intellimouse
> explorer last otherwise you might miss that mouse supports extended
> protocol.
>
Sorry, I'm not sure I understand; you're saying that the intellimouse
probe will match other mice?
Yes, for example many Logitech mice supporting PS2++ will respond to
intellimouse and explorer probes. Some versions of synaptics firmware
support intellimouse protocol as well. I am pretty sure ALPS does too.
I originally had kept the probing order, but dropped it here:
http://dev.laptop.org/git?p=users/dilinger/psmouse-split;a=commit;h=14f352333d057c3a7a05fdab484b339b9bac2959
I can readd it if necessary.
> 2. Synaptics hardware has to be probed even if synaptics protocol is not
> used, otherwise intellimouse probe will case trackpoint on passthrough
> port not working.
>
I'm aware of that, and the synaptics_hardware variable remains in the
psmouse_extensions() function as a reminder. I just need to figure out
a clean way to do the probing; I wanted feedback about whether people
liked the broken out modules idea, first.
OK.
> 3. Doing full reset after every protocol probe will cause long delays in
> mouse detection.
I'm not convinced this will actually take that long, and it should only
happen during init. With ordered detection and an additional field in
the psmouse_protocol struct, each protocol could specify whether it
should be reset or not. However, if it's not necessary, I'd rather get
rid of it all (sounds like the detection ordering might be necessary,
though).
Resets are needed. We used not to have it but that confused some mice.
>
> 4. Maxproto is still needed - psmouse base still contains several protocols
> and sometimes users need to force "standard" protocols (Intellimouse/
> Explorer), for example when using a KVM switch.
>
Yes, I intended to split out the protocols into a separate module, as
mentioned in
http://dev.laptop.org/git?p=users/dilinger/psmouse-split;a=commit;h=2a19dbb884cb05b5e9469bde439ac60ed56bd48d
If a KVM requires a user to force a standard protocol, I would think
that forcing it via psmouse_attr_set_protocol would be a much nicer way
than dealing w/ max_proto. Combine that w/ being able to rmmod specific
protocol modules (ie, rmmod psmouse-synaptics if it turns out that
detection is incorrectly seeing something synaptics-like).
That requires changing your init scripts and such. In many instances
specifying psmouse.max_proto on kernel command line is the easiest
way.
> Also, splitting psmouse into several modules as opposed to having monolitic
> psmouse with an option to exclude some protocols via Kconfig does not really
> buy us anything - because protocol autoload is not possible (we do not know
It does; compiling a custom kernel for users is a pain. However, using
a distribution kernel and being able to control specifically which
modules are loaded makes life a lot easier (users get security updates,
etc).
> what protocols port uses until we actually do the probe) distributions will
> have to compile and load everything anyway. Custom kernel users will just
> have to compile protocols they need into psmouse.
>
Yes, distributions will have to compile and load everything anyways.
However, people who know what hardware they have can then force loading
of a specific module, rather than having a monolithic module or having
to recompile a custom kernel.
I would consider this module juggling way over the head for average
user. I want to have the ability to exclude some protocols from
psmouse module via Kconfig option, but I want it to be hidden under
CONFIG_EMBEDDED for everything except very raretic protocols (like
OLPC).
--
Dmitry
-
To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-kernel" in
the body of a message to [email protected]
More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html
Please read the FAQ at http://www.tux.org/lkml/
[Index of Archives]
[Kernel Newbies]
[Netfilter]
[Bugtraq]
[Photo]
[Stuff]
[Gimp]
[Yosemite News]
[MIPS Linux]
[ARM Linux]
[Linux Security]
[Linux RAID]
[Video 4 Linux]
[Linux for the blind]
[Linux Resources]