> On Wed, Jan 20, 1999 at 07:19:15PM -0800, David O'Brien wrote:
> [..]
> > etc?  This is what the original poster suggested, and nobody has really
> > given a good response what is wrong with the "grouping" being expressed
> > in the modules' name.  Mike Smith and Andrzej Bialecki have given good
> > reasons why *not* to go to a subdirectory structure.
> 
> What would you name a network stack?   For example:
> 
>       net_mpls_tdp.ko
>       net_mpls_ldp.ko
>       net_mpls_core.ko
> 
> or
>       net_h323v2_yada.ko
>       net_h323v2_yadayada.ko
>       net_h323v2_barf.ko
> 
> or
>       codec_g711.ko
>       codec_g7231a.ko
>       codec_g729.ko
> 
> Is that acceptable?  Anyone have better ideas?

I guess it depends on how fancy we want to get.  Here are some examples 
that I've been rolling around; some are fanciful, some practical)

        dev_            generic device (eg. dev_sio)
        bus_            bus support (eg. bus_pci)
        netif_          network interface (eg. netif_ed)
        netproto_       network protocol (eg. netproto_arp)
        netdomain_      network domain (eg. netdomain_ip)
        vfs_            VFS layer (eg. vfs_nfs)
        kern_           kernel infrastructure (eg. kern_vfs)
        syscall_        loadable system calls (eg. syscall_sendfile)

I don't think we want to make the mistake of being too specific about 
what pigeonhole something falls into.  In many cases, we might want new 
categories when a new case arises, eg. for USB we might have:

        bus_usb.ko
        usb_hub.ko
        usb_mouse.ko    
        usb_keyboard.ko
        usb_disk.ko
        usb_scanner.ko
        ...

There's no ambiguity here, the names are simple and convey a direct 
set of relationships.  Your examples (except the first) do a pretty 
good job of the same thing.

-- 
\\  Sometimes you're ahead,       \\  Mike Smith
\\  sometimes you're behind.      \\  m...@smith.net.au
\\  The race is long, and in the  \\  msm...@freebsd.org
\\  end it's only with yourself.  \\  msm...@cdrom.com



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