Re: [PATCH 5/5] pcmcia: disable pcmcia ioctl for !ARM, prepare forremoval

From: Dominik Brodowski
Date: Sat May 15 2010 - 10:56:43 EST


Russell,

On Sat, May 15, 2010 at 03:46:39PM +0100, Russell King wrote:
> On Sat, May 15, 2010 at 04:37:05PM +0200, Dominik Brodowski wrote:
> > Russell,
> >
> > On Sat, May 15, 2010 at 03:24:10PM +0100, Russell King wrote:
> > > On Wed, Mar 03, 2010 at 09:00:48AM +0100, Dominik Brodowski wrote:
> > > > Furthermore, the last legitimate use of the ioctl to be reported
> > > > relates to the ARM architecture in 2008.[1] Attempts to resolve
> > > > this issue turned out unsuccessful so far.[2] Other usages have only
> > > > been reported as hear-say. If there are any legitiate and necessary
> > > > use-cases remaining, please speak out before the end of the grace
> > > > period until 2.6.3{5,6}(-rc1).
> > >
> > > What's the point of speaking out? You don't take any notice of people
> > > who do, and you continue your crusade of wanting to remove it. Please,
> > > stop giving the impression that you give a damn of what people say about
> > > the ioctl interface.
> >
> > The _only_ person who really has spoken out is you. All my requests to
> > actually see source code or actual use cases (e.g. which parts of the ioctl
> > do actually get called) did not lead to _anything_.
>
> See the source code? You clearly haven't been reading what I've been
> saying to you on the subject if you think I can produce source code.
> I've already explained this to you several times, but it seems to be
> constantly ignored.

That's why there is the _other_ alternative: "actual use cases (e.g. which
parts of the ioctl do actually get called)". For this, you only need to be
able to update/modify the kernel. More than two years ago, you signalised
to do exactly this:

| I'll spend some time this coming weekend working out precisely what it
| requires from the ioctl interface - maybe we can have a cut-down ioctl
| interface that bolts straight on as an "add on" to the new controls
| without being too invasive, while still allowing its PCMCIA bits to
| work.

[ http://lists.infradead.org/pipermail/linux-pcmcia/2008-April/005450.html ]

I haven't heard anything about the result of this experiment, even though
asking a number of times (e.g.
http://lists.infradead.org/pipermail/linux-pcmcia/2010-January/006740.html ).

Best,
Dominik
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