> On Fri, Mar 29, 2019 at 09:48:23AM +0100, Marek Behun wrote: > > > pavel@amd:~/cip$ cat /sys/power/state > > > freeze mem disk > > > pavel@amd:~/cip$ cat /sys/class/leds/phy0-led/trigger > > > none bluetooth-power rfkill-any rfkill-none kbd-scrolllock kbd-numlock > > > kbd-capslock kbd-kanalock kbd-shiftlock kbd-altgrlock kbd-ctrllock > > > kbd-altlock kbd-shiftllock kbd-shiftrlock kbd-ctrlllock kbd-ctrlrlock > > > AC-online BAT0-charging-or-full BAT0-charging BAT0-full > > > BAT0-charging-blink-full-solid rfkill0 phy0rx phy0tx phy0assoc > > > phy0radio [phy0tpt] mmc0 timer heartbeat audio-mute audio-micmute > > > rfkill1 hci0-power rfkill8 > > > pavel@amd:~/cip$ > > > > > > > Yes, and cpufreq governors too list available governosrs as space > > separated list. > > Maybe the "one value per file" rule was thought-of only after these > > were merged? > > For small numbers of things, like /sys/power/state, which was the first > file to use this style, it was fine as we "knew" this was going to be a > small, well-bounded list of states that the file could be in. > > As you have seen, 'trigger' is not that, and I am pretty sure I have > complained about this in the past. > > I suggest you use a different way of "discovering" what types of > triggers are available. I don't know what would work best for you, but > any time you are ever worried about the size of a sysfs file's buffer, > you know you are doing something wrong.
Are we doing something wrong? I don't think so. It looks like sysfs has arbitrary limit it should not have. Can we get that fixed? Because userland already knows about this interface, it is one-type-of-value-per-file, and just removing the limit seems to be the best way forward. Pavel -- (english) http://www.livejournal.com/~pavelmachek (cesky, pictures) http://atrey.karlin.mff.cuni.cz/~pavel/picture/horses/blog.html