On Tue, Dec 29, 2020 at 02:57:38PM +0100, Hans de Goede wrote:
On 12/29/20 2:06 PM, Charles Keepax wrote:
On Mon, Dec 28, 2020 at 04:28:07PM +0000, Mark Brown wrote:
On Mon, Dec 28, 2020 at 02:16:04PM +0100, Hans de Goede wrote:
And more in general AFAIK extcon is sort of deprecated and it is not advised to use it for new code. I would esp. not expect it to be used for new jack-detection code since we already have standard uAPI support for that through sound/core/jack.c .
Has Android been fixed to use the ALSA/input layer interfaces? That's why that code is there, long term the goal was to have ALSA generate extcon events too so userspace could fall over to using that. The basic thing at the time was that nobody liked any of the existing interfaces (the input layer thing is a total bodge stemming from it having been easy to hack in a key for GPIO detection and using ALSA controls means having to link against alsa-lib which is an awful faff for system level UI stuff) and there were three separate userspace interfaces used by different software stacks which needed to be joined together, extcon was felt to be a bit more designed and is a superset so that was the direction we were heading in.
Android has been updated to have the option to catch input events for jack detection now.
I have always been slightly confused between extcon and the ALSA jack reporting and have been unsure as to what is the longer term plan here. I vaguely thought there was a gentle plan to move to extcon, it is interesting to see Hans basically saying the opposite that extcon is intended to be paritially deprecated. I assume you just mean with respect to audio jacks, not other connector types?
No I mean that afaik extcon is being deprecated in general. Extcon is mostly meant for kernel internal use, to allow things like charger-type-detection done by e.g. a fsa micro-usb mux or a Type-C PD controller to be hooked up to the actual charger chip and set the input-current-limit based on this.
Fascinating thanks for taking the time to write such detailed answers. I thought it was mostly intended for user-space usage, but I guess I never really thought through that most of this stuff you don't really need to know from user-space.
I would agree with Mark though that if extcon exists for external connectors it seems odd that audio jacks would have their own special way rather than just using the connector stuff.
Well as I said above in me experience the extcon code is (was) mostly meant for kernel internal use. The sysfs API is more of a debugging tool then anything else (IMHO).
Also the kernel has support for a lot of sound devices, including many with jack-detection support. Yet a grep for EXTCON_JACK_HEADPHONE over the entire mainline kernel tree shows that only extcon-arizona.c is using it. So given that we have dozens of drivers providing jack functionality through the sound/core/jack.c core and only 1 driver using the extcon interface I believe that the ship on how to export this to userspace has long sailed, since most userspace code will clearly expect the sound/core/jack.c way of doing things to be used.
Arguably we should/could maybe even drop the extcon part of extcon-arizona.c but I did not do that as I did not want to regress existing userspace code which may depend on this (on specific embedded/android devices).
All reasonable arguments, with Android now supporting input events for jacks I guess there would be no need for us to use extcon for future devices.
There is maybe more argument for porting the Arizona code across anyways, since for a long time Android didn't properly support extcon either. It supported the earlier out of tree switch stuff, extcon had a switch compatibility mode, but that didn't actually work I think due to android hard coding some sysfs naming or something (memory is a little fuzzy on the details was a while ago now).
I think extcon support was fixed in Android at about the same time the support for input events was added. So it might be harmless but someone probably needs to go and check the timeline before we go changing stuff.
Thanks, Charles