On Tue, Feb 6, 2018 at 11:05 PM, Alexandre Belloni <alexandre.bell...@bootlin.com> wrote: > /dev/nvram was never meant to be used alongside the RTC CMOS driver from > drivers/rtc as it already expose the NVRAM through another interface.. > Anyway, the last defconfig to enable it properly was removed in 2010 so > prevent ARM users from selecting it. > > Signed-off-by: Alexandre Belloni <alexandre.bell...@bootlin.com> > --- > drivers/char/Kconfig | 2 +- > 1 file changed, 1 insertion(+), 1 deletion(-) > > diff --git a/drivers/char/Kconfig b/drivers/char/Kconfig > index c28dca0c613d..9bcac927cfd0 100644 > --- a/drivers/char/Kconfig > +++ b/drivers/char/Kconfig > @@ -264,7 +264,7 @@ source "drivers/char/hw_random/Kconfig" > > config NVRAM > tristate "/dev/nvram support" > - depends on ATARI || X86 || (ARM && RTC_DRV_CMOS) || GENERIC_NVRAM > + depends on ATARI || X86 || GENERIC_NVRAM > ---help--- > If you say Y here and create a character special file /dev/nvram > with major number 10 and minor number 144 using mknod ("man mknod"),
The change looks good: Acked-by: Arnd Bergmann <a...@arndb.de> but taking a closer look raises a few other points: * arch/arm/kernel/time.c has this code #if defined(CONFIG_RTC_DRV_CMOS) || defined(CONFIG_RTC_DRV_CMOS_MODULE) || \ defined(CONFIG_NVRAM) || defined(CONFIG_NVRAM_MODULE) /* this needs a better home */ DEFINE_SPINLOCK(rtc_lock); EXPORT_SYMBOL(rtc_lock); #endif /* pc-style 'CMOS' RTC support */ That can be adapted now, or maybe we could move all definitions into a common place (that needs some more planning). * similarly, this line in nvram.c can be simplified: #if defined(CONFIG_ATARI) # define MACH ATARI #elif defined(__i386__) || defined(__x86_64__) || defined(__arm__) /* and ?? */ # define MACH PC #else # error Cannot build nvram driver for this machine configuration. #endif * GENERIC_NVRAM is not really generic, instead this seems to be the chardev that is used for 32-bit powerpc (powermac, 85xx, 86xx), while 64-bit powerpc (cell, maple, opal, pseries) use code from arch/powerpc/kernel/nvram_64.c, with the same underlying arch hooks. The nvram_64 code appears to be mostly a superset of the 32-bit generic_nvram one. * The code in drivers/char/nvram is not used at all when GENERIC_NVRAM is set, and half the code in there is different between x86 and atari. * most of the external interface in include/linux/nvram.h is unused, the rest tends to be architecture specific * The procfs file appears to be completely useless on any 64-bit x86 machine, this is what I see: $ cat /proc/driver/nvram Checksum status: valid # floppies : 0 Floppy 0 type : none Floppy 1 type : none HD 0 type : none HD 1 type : none HD type 48 data: 0/0/0 C/H/S, precomp 0, lz 0 HD type 49 data: 156/0/0 C/H/S, precomp 0, lz 0 DOS base memory: 635 kB Extended memory: 65535 kB (configured), 65535 kB (tested) Gfx adapter : EGA, VGA, ... (with BIOS) FPU : not installed Arnd