On Mon, Sep 15, 2014 at 12:29:27PM -0700, Darren Hart wrote: > On Fri, Sep 12, 2014 at 06:50:37PM -0600, Azael Avalos wrote: > > The position file on sysfs was reporting absolute values > > for its axes. > > > > This patch fixes the direction reporting (either negative > > or positive), as well as added a mutex lock to it. > > > > Hi All, > > I've added Greg KH, Rafael, and H. Peter Anvin to get some clarity on a topic > which is coming up repeatedly in the platform-drivers-x86 subsystem. > Specifically, whether or not the driver-specific sysfs attributes should be > considered a "stable userspace interface". > > The sysfs documentation [1] specfifically calls out the following types of > device properties: > > o devpath > o kernel name > o subsystem > o driver > o attributes (the topic of this email) > > In the case of this patch, Azael proposes changing the x,y,z attributes from > the > absolute values read from the device to relative signed values. > > In my opinion, this changes a userspace interface that exists prior to this > development cycle. As such, the attributes must remain as they are and new > attributes should be added if a new interface is wanted/needed. New x_rel, > y_rel, z_rel attributes could be added for this purpose.
Yes, never change existing files to start showing different types of values, that's not ok. But you can remove an existing file and replace it with something with a different name, _IF_ the userspace tool that was using it can also be changed. But don't go creating new interfaces when an existing one is already present, as shown by: > I have also suggested this device (2 actually) would be better supported as an > IIO accelerometer device, but even that would change the sysfs interface by > removing these altogether and using the IIO standardized path and > accelerometer > interface. That's a better goal overall, then the "odd" sysfs files are now gone, to be replaced with the standard interface which all tools should already be using. hope this helps, greg k-h -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-kernel" in the body of a message to majord...@vger.kernel.org More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html Please read the FAQ at http://www.tux.org/lkml/