Re: Add a "enable" sysfs attribute to the pci devices to allow userspace(Xorg) to enable devices without doing foul direct access

From: Arjan van de Ven
Date: Tue May 02 2006 - 12:45:40 EST


Jon Smirl wrote:
On 4/29/06, Arjan van de Ven <arjan@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
This patch adds an "enable" sysfs attribute to each PCI device. When read it
shows the "enabled-ness" of the device, but you can write a "0" into it to
disable a device, and a "1" to enable it.

What is the rationale for this?

you snipped that out of the email ;)

Doing this encourages people to write
device drivers in user space that probably should be a kernel driver.

not really, there's not a lot you can do. What you CAN do is read roms and stuff like that;
the vbetool and X need that for example

What are you going to do if two competing apps want to set it to two
different states?

then you're root and you just shot yourself in the proverbial foot.


An alternate way to fix this problem is to write a device driver that
attaches to hardware with PCI class VGA.

and then that sucks too because in linux only 1 driver can bind to a device,
AND you're limited to only vga devices.
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