| How to Get Your Patch Accepted Into the Hwmon Subsystem |
| ======================================================= |
| |
| This text is a collection of suggestions for people writing patches or |
| drivers for the hwmon subsystem. Following these suggestions will greatly |
| increase the chances of your change being accepted. |
| |
| |
| 1. General |
| ---------- |
| |
| * It should be unnecessary to mention, but please read and follow: |
| |
| - Documentation/process/submit-checklist.rst |
| - Documentation/process/submitting-patches.rst |
| - Documentation/process/coding-style.rst |
| |
| * Please run your patch through 'checkpatch --strict'. There should be no |
| errors, no warnings, and few if any check messages. If there are any |
| messages, please be prepared to explain. |
| |
| * Please use the standard multi-line comment style. Do not mix C and C++ |
| style comments in a single driver (with the exception of the SPDX license |
| identifier). |
| |
| * If your patch generates checkpatch errors, warnings, or check messages, |
| please refrain from explanations such as "I prefer that coding style". |
| Keep in mind that each unnecessary message helps hiding a real problem, |
| and a consistent coding style makes it easier for others to understand |
| and review the code. |
| |
| * Please test your patch thoroughly. We are not your test group. |
| Sometimes a patch can not or not completely be tested because of missing |
| hardware. In such cases, you should test-build the code on at least one |
| architecture. If run-time testing was not achieved, it should be written |
| explicitly below the patch header. |
| |
| * If your patch (or the driver) is affected by configuration options such as |
| CONFIG_SMP, make sure it compiles for all configuration variants. |
| |
| |
| 2. Adding functionality to existing drivers |
| ------------------------------------------- |
| |
| * Make sure the documentation in Documentation/hwmon/<driver_name>.rst is up to |
| date. |
| |
| * Make sure the information in Kconfig is up to date. |
| |
| * If the added functionality requires some cleanup or structural changes, split |
| your patch into a cleanup part and the actual addition. This makes it easier |
| to review your changes, and to bisect any resulting problems. |
| |
| * Never mix bug fixes, cleanup, and functional enhancements in a single patch. |
| |
| |
| 3. New drivers |
| -------------- |
| |
| * Running your patch or driver file(s) through checkpatch does not mean its |
| formatting is clean. If unsure about formatting in your new driver, run it |
| through Lindent. Lindent is not perfect, and you may have to do some minor |
| cleanup, but it is a good start. |
| |
| * Consider adding yourself to MAINTAINERS. |
| |
| * Document the driver in Documentation/hwmon/<driver_name>.rst. |
| |
| * Add the driver to Kconfig and Makefile in alphabetical order. |
| |
| * Make sure that all dependencies are listed in Kconfig. |
| |
| * Please list include files in alphabetic order. |
| |
| * Please align continuation lines with '(' on the previous line. |
| |
| * Avoid forward declarations if you can. Rearrange the code if necessary. |
| |
| * Avoid macros to generate groups of sensor attributes. It not only confuses |
| checkpatch, but also makes it more difficult to review the code. |
| |
| * Avoid calculations in macros and macro-generated functions. While such macros |
| may save a line or so in the source, it obfuscates the code and makes code |
| review more difficult. It may also result in code which is more complicated |
| than necessary. Use inline functions or just regular functions instead. |
| |
| * Limit the number of kernel log messages. In general, your driver should not |
| generate an error message just because a runtime operation failed. Report |
| errors to user space instead, using an appropriate error code. Keep in mind |
| that kernel error log messages not only fill up the kernel log, but also are |
| printed synchronously, most likely with interrupt disabled, often to a serial |
| console. Excessive logging can seriously affect system performance. |
| |
| * Use devres functions whenever possible to allocate resources. For rationale |
| and supported functions, please see Documentation/driver-api/driver-model/devres.rst. |
| If a function is not supported by devres, consider using devm_add_action(). |
| |
| * If the driver has a detect function, make sure it is silent. Debug messages |
| and messages printed after a successful detection are acceptable, but it |
| must not print messages such as "Chip XXX not found/supported". |
| |
| Keep in mind that the detect function will run for all drivers supporting an |
| address if a chip is detected on that address. Unnecessary messages will just |
| pollute the kernel log and not provide any value. |
| |
| * Provide a detect function if and only if a chip can be detected reliably. |
| |
| * Only the following I2C addresses shall be probed: 0x18-0x1f, 0x28-0x2f, |
| 0x48-0x4f, 0x58, 0x5c, 0x73 and 0x77. Probing other addresses is strongly |
| discouraged as it is known to cause trouble with other (non-hwmon) I2C |
| chips. If your chip lives at an address which can't be probed then the |
| device will have to be instantiated explicitly (which is always better |
| anyway.) |
| |
| * Avoid writing to chip registers in the detect function. If you have to write, |
| only do it after you have already gathered enough data to be certain that the |
| detection is going to be successful. |
| |
| Keep in mind that the chip might not be what your driver believes it is, and |
| writing to it might cause a bad misconfiguration. |
| |
| * Make sure there are no race conditions in the probe function. Specifically, |
| completely initialize your chip and your driver first, then register with |
| the hwmon subsystem. |
| |
| * Use devm_hwmon_device_register_with_info() or, if your driver needs a remove |
| function, hwmon_device_register_with_info() to register your driver with the |
| hwmon subsystem. Try using devm_add_action() instead of a remove function if |
| possible. Do not use hwmon_device_register(). |
| |
| * Your driver should be buildable as module. If not, please be prepared to |
| explain why it has to be built into the kernel. |
| |
| * Do not provide support for deprecated sysfs attributes. |
| |
| * Do not create non-standard attributes unless really needed. If you have to use |
| non-standard attributes, or you believe you do, discuss it on the mailing list |
| first. Either case, provide a detailed explanation why you need the |
| non-standard attribute(s). |
| Standard attributes are specified in Documentation/hwmon/sysfs-interface.rst. |
| |
| * When deciding which sysfs attributes to support, look at the chip's |
| capabilities. While we do not expect your driver to support everything the |
| chip may offer, it should at least support all limits and alarms. |
| |
| * Last but not least, please check if a driver for your chip already exists |
| before starting to write a new driver. Especially for temperature sensors, |
| new chips are often variants of previously released chips. In some cases, |
| a presumably new chip may simply have been relabeled. |