On 2014년 07월 29일 20:59, Andreas Färber wrote:
Am 29.07.2014 10:05, schrieb Sjoerd Simons:
On Tue, 2014-07-29 at 14:38 +0900, Inki Dae wrote:
On 2014년 07월 28일 23:45, Sjoerd Simons wrote:
On Mon, 2014-07-28 at 23:17 +0900, Inki Dae wrote:
On 2014년 07월 28일 17:30, Sjoerd Simons wrote: I don't see why Exynos drm driver should be auto-loaded module. I think all devices covered by Exynos drm framework are not hot-plugged. Maybe there is my missing point. So can you explain why Exynos drm driver should be auto-loaded module?
The background for this is that I'm building a distribution-style multiplatform kernel, that is to say a kernel which can boot on a big set of different ARM boards. As such, the intention is to keep the core zImage as small as possible and essentially build things as far as possible as loadable modules. So in a sense, all of the hardware is "hotplugged", depending on which board the kernel is actually booted on!
For that use-case, exynosdrm needs to be able to build as a module (which it already can!) and it needs the required meta-data for userspace to know when it should be loaded. The latter is what my patch adds.
It seems that you want that module data of sub drivers are added by depmod to /lib/modules/KERNEL_VERSION/modules.xxxmap because some hot-plug system should use modules.xxxmap file to find the proper driver to load.
Yes. I would like the module to export its module alias information for the subdrivers such that depmod can add it to its databases and the normal module autoloading mechanisms work as intended. Note that in my case, "some hot-plug" system is really just udev, not something special..
+1 here.
While I haven't tested this on my Exynos devices yet since I'm still working on -next kernels there, here's an example of such a 3.16 config:
http://kernel.opensuse.org/cgit/kernel-source/tree/config/armv7hl/default
Of the platforms enabled, all drivers are configured as modules where possible, to keep kernel size small, and dracut (or kiwi) is used to generate an initrd that makes available the modules.
So it would certainly be good to have the DRM auto-load somehow, without the user having to manually touch config files. In particular when I think of the Chromebooks, where Wifi needs configuration on first boot and no serial console is accessible.
Got it. will merge them. However, I'm not sure that Exynos drm should have hot-plug feature such as PCI base devices: all devices covered by Exynos drm framework cannot attached and detached to and from machine.
Thanks, Inki Dae
Regards, Andreas