[PATCH] clockevents: Add (missing) default case for switch blocks
Ingo Molnar
mingo at kernel.org
Fri Feb 20 01:36:59 PST 2015
* Peter Zijlstra <peterz at infradead.org> wrote:
> > So this whole approach looks fragile for several reasons:
> >
> > - 'mode setting' callbacks are just bad by design
> > because they mix several functions into the same entry
> > point, complicating the handler functions
> > unnecessarily. We should reduce complexity, not expand
> > on it.
> >
> > - now by adding 'default' you hide from drivers the
> > ability to easily discover whether it has been updated
> > to some new core clockevents mode setting feature or
> > not.
>
> So this patch was a follow on from bd624d75db21
> ("clockevents: Introduce mode specific callbacks").
>
> That patch changes the set_mode() interface; and provides
> per mode functions.
So why is a 'default' mode needed then? It makes the
addition of new modes to the legacy handler easier, which
looks backwards.
> New (and updated) drivers should not use ->set_mode()
> anymore, but it was felt that we do not want to go do
> flag day changes.
I fully agree that we don't want flag day changes, but make
it really apparent that it's an obsolete interface:
- rename it to set_mode_obsolete()
- try to convert as many of the easy cases as possible -
the overwhelming majority of mode setting functions
look reasonably simple.
- get rid of the mode enum in the core, and rename the
mode bits to CLOCK_EVT_MODE_OBSOLETE_XXX.
etc.
> And it allows for adding optional modes; not every driver
> needs to go implement all mode functions if there is a
> sane default action.
>
> But it does mean we need to be able to add values to the
> enum.
So I'm confused: if we are using proper callbacks (like my
example outlined) , why is a 'mode enum' needed at all?
Thanks,
Ingo
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