[PATCH 0/3] Transition /proc/cpuinfo -> sysfs

From: Deepak Saxena
Date: Wed Aug 11 2004 - 17:44:11 EST



Following this email will be a set of patches that provide a first pass
at exporting information currently in /proc/cpuinfo to sysfs for i386 and
ARM. There are applications that are dependent on /proc/cpuinfo atm, so we
can't just kill it, but we should agree on a kill date and require all
arches & apps to transition by that point. I've added code to
proc_misc.c to remind the user that the cpuinfo interface is going
away (currently using arbitrary date ~1 year from now). I've also
added a pointer to struct cpu that can be used by arch code to
store any information that might be needed during attribute printing.

Couple of questions:

- Do we want to standardize on a set of attributes that all CPUs
must provide to sysfs? bogomips, L1 cache size/type/sets/assoc (when
available), L2 cache (L3..L4), etc? This would make the output be the
same across architectures for those features and would simply require
adding some fields to struct cpu to carry this data and some generic
ATTR entries to drivers/base/cpu.c. I am all for standardized
interfaces so I'll do a first pass at this if desired.

- On an HT setup, do we want link(s) pointing to sibling(s)?

- Currently the bug and feature fields on x86 have "yes" and "no".
Do we want the same in sysfs or 1|0?

- Instead of dumping the "flags" field, should we just dump cpu
registers as hex strings and let the user decode (as the comment
for the x86_cap_flags implies.

I'll try to do MIPS, SH, and PPC when I get a chance (all I have access
to), but have other things to do for a while, so want comments on above
questions first.

Tnx,
~Deepak

--
Deepak Saxena - dsaxena at plexity dot net - http://www.plexity.net/

"Unlike me, many of you have accepted the situation of your imprisonment and
will die here like rotten cabbages." - Number 6
-
To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-kernel" in
the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html
Please read the FAQ at http://www.tux.org/lkml/