On 5/15/19 8:06 AM, Kai-Heng Feng wrote:
at 20:33, Greg KH <gre...@linuxfoundation.org> wrote:

On Wed, May 15, 2019 at 07:54:58PM +0800, Kai-Heng Feng wrote:
at 19:40, Greg KH <gre...@linuxfoundation.org> wrote:

On Wed, May 15, 2019 at 07:24:01PM +0800, Kai-Heng Feng wrote:
The rtl8821ce can be found on many HP and Lenovo laptops.
Users have been using out-of-tree module for a while,

The new Realtek WiFi driver, rtw88, will support rtl8821ce in 2020 or
later.

Where is that driver, and why is it going to take so long to get merged?

rtw88 is in 5.2 now, but it doesn’t support 8821ce yet.

They plan to add the support in 2020.

Who is "they" and what is needed to support this device and why wait a
full year?

“They” refers to Realtek.
It’s their plan so I can’t really answer that on behalf of Realtek.


296 files changed, 206166 insertions(+)

Ugh, why do we keep having to add the whole mess for every single one of
these devices?

Because Realtek devices are unfortunately ubiquitous so the support is
better come from kernel.

That's not the issue here.  The issue is that we keep adding the same
huge driver files to the kernel tree, over and over, with no real change
at all.  We have seen almost all of these files in other realtek
drivers, right?

Yes. They use one single driver to support different SoCs, different architectures and even different OSes.
That’s why it’s a mess.

Why not use the ones we already have?

It’s virtually impossible because Realtek’s mega wifi driver uses tons of #ifdefs, only one chip can be selected to be supported at compile time.


But better yet, why not add proper support for this hardware and not use
a staging driver?

Realtek plans to add the support in 2020, if everything goes well.
Meanwhile, many users of HP and Lenovo laptops are using out-of-tree driver, some of them are stuck to older kernels because they don’t know how to fix the driver. So I strongly think having this in kernel is beneficial to many users, even it’s only for a year.

Why not solve the older kernel problem the way I do with drivers for many Realtek devices by creating a GitHub project with the kernel API changes properly handled by ifdef statements? See the lwfinger projects. That solves the problem of users without the skills needed to adjust to kernel changes without burdening the entire Linux kernel with these bloated drivers. There are no reasons that a wifi driver should require 200K lines of code!

Larry

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