On Mon Jul 14, 2025 at 9:57 AM CEST, Dirk Behme wrote: > On 13/07/2025 16:19, Danilo Krummrich wrote: >> On Sun Jul 13, 2025 at 4:09 PM CEST, Daniel Almeida wrote: >>> On a second look, I wonder how useful this will be. >>> >>> fn handle(&self, dev: &Device<Bound>) -> IrqReturn >>> >>> Sorry for borrowing this terminology, but here we offer Device<Bound>, while I >>> suspect that most drivers will be looking for the most derived Device type >>> instead. So for drm drivers this will be drm::Device, for example, not the base >>> dev::Device type. I assume that this pattern will hold for other subsystems as >>> well. >>> >>> Which brings me to my second point: drivers can store an ARef<drm::Device> on >>> the handler itself, and I assume that the same will be possible in other >>> subsystems. >> >> Well, the whole point is that you can use a &Device<Bound> to directly access >> device resources without any overhead, i.e. >> >> fn handle(&self, dev: &Device<Bound>) -> IrqReturn { >> let io = self.iomem.access(dev); >> >> io.write32(...); > > As this is exactly the example I was discussing privately with Daniel > (many thanks!), independent on the device discussion here, just for my > understanding: > > Is it ok to do a 'self.iomem.access(dev)' at each interrupt? Absolutely, Devres::access() is a very cheap accessor, see also [1]. Compiled down, the only thing that Revocable::access() does is deriving a pointer from another pointer by adding an offset. That's exactly why we want the &Device<Bound> cookie, to avoid more expensive operations. [1] https://rust.docs.kernel.org/src/kernel/revocable.rs.html#151 > Wouldn't it > be cheaper/faster to pass 'io' instead of 'iomem' to the interrupt handler? Well, consider the types of the example: iomem: Devres<IoMem<SIZE>> io: &IoMem<Size> You can't store a reference with a non-static lifetime in something with an open-ended lifetime, such as the Handler object. How would you ensure that the reference is still valid? The Devres<IoMem<SIZE>> object might have been dropped already, either by the user or by Devres revoking the inner object due to device unbind.