Thread (50 messages) 50 messages, 9 authors, 2017-08-23

Re: [RFC 00/19] Async sub-notifiers and how to use them

From: Laurent Pinchart <laurent.pinchart@ideasonboard.com>
Date: 2017-08-23 12:29:24
Also in: linux-media

Hi Hans,

On Wednesday, 23 August 2017 12:09:15 EEST Hans Verkuil wrote:
On 08/04/17 20:25, Sakari Ailus wrote:
quoted
Niklas Söderlund wrote:
quoted
On 2017-07-20 19:14:01 +0300, Sakari Ailus wrote:
quoted
On Wed, Jul 19, 2017 at 01:42:55PM +0200, Hans Verkuil wrote:
quoted
On 18/07/17 21:03, Sakari Ailus wrote:
quoted
Hi folks,

This RFC patchset achieves a number of things which I've put to the
same patchset for they need to be show together to demonstrate the use
cases.

I don't really intend this to compete with Niklas's patchset but much
of the problem area addressed by the two is the same.

Comments would be welcome.

- Add AS3645A LED flash class driver.

- Add async notifiers (by Niklas).

- V4L2 sub-device node registration is moved to take place at the same
  time with the registration of the sub-device itself. With this
  change, sub-device node registration behaviour is aligned with video
  node registration.

- The former is made possible by moving the bound() callback after
  sub-device registration.

- As all the device node registration and link creation is done as the
  respective devices are probed, there is no longer dependency to the
  notifier complete callback which as itself is seen problematic. The
  complete callback still exists but there's no need to use it,
  pending changes in individual drivers.
  
  See:
  <URL:http://www.spinics.net/lists/linux-media/msg118323.html>
  
  As a result, if a part of the media device fails to initialise
  because it is e.g. physically broken, it will be possible to use
  what works.
I've got major problems with this from a userspace point of view. In
the vast majority of cases you just want to bail out if one or more
subdevs fail.
I admit it's easier for the user space if the device becomes available
only when all its component drivers have registered.

Also remember that video nodes are registered in the file system right
on device probe time. It's only sub-device and media device node
registration that has taken place in the notifier's complete handler.
Is this always the case? In the R-Car VIN driver I register the video
devices using video_register_device() in the complete handler. Am I
doing things wrong in that driver? I had a patch where I moved the
video_register_device() call to probe time but it got shoot down in
review and was dropped.
I don't think the current implementation is wrong, it's just different
from other drivers; there's really no requirement regarding this AFAIU.
It's one of the things where no attention has been paid I presume.
It actually is a requirement: when a device node appears applications can
reasonably expect to have a fully functioning device. True for any device
node.
Why not ? I'm not aware of any such kernel-wide requirement. 
You don't want to have to wait until some unspecified time before the full
functionality is there.
We certainly should specify that time and give userspace a way to find out 
what is usable and when.
I try to pay attention to this when reviewing code, since not following this
rule basically introduces a race condition which is hard to test.
quoted
However doing anything that can fail earlier on would be nicer since
there's no reasonable way to signal an error from complete callback
either.
Right.

Adding support for cases where devices may not be present is very desirable,
but this should go through an RFC process first to hammer out all the
details.

Today we do not support this and we have to review code with that in mind.

So the first async subnotifiers implementation should NOT support this
(although it can of course be designed with this in mind).
I very much disagree. The first async subnotifiers implementation (and I still 
believe we don't need subnotifiers, there's nothing "sub" in them) shall 
support this. If it means we first have to hammer out the details of out it 
will work, so be it.
Once it is in we can start on an RFC on how to support partial pipelines. I
have a lot of questions about that that need to be answered first.

One thing at a time. Trying to do everything at once never works.
Sure, so let's start with probe time device node registration, and then move 
on to subnotifiers.

-- 
Regards,

Laurent Pinchart
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