forked from Minki/linux
6a8b25abf1
A nice mix this time of excellent cleanups (many to send drivers speeding toward staging graduations) and new drivers / device support. A good part of this is Brian Masney's never ending task on the tsl2x7x driver. The end is in sight so hopefully we'll get that one out of staging very soon! New device support * AD5686 - Support AD5685R (was wrongly present as AD5685) - Support AD5672R, AD5676, AD5676, AD5684R and AD5686R 4 and 8 channel SPI DACs with various precisions. - Support AD5671R, AD5675R, AD5694, AD5694R, AD5695R, AD5696 and AD5696R I2C DACs with various percisions and numbers of channels. * Analog front end rescale driver - New driver. - Support current sensing usings a shunt resistor. - Support simple voltage dividers. - support simple current sense amplifiers. * TI dac5571 - New driver and device bindings supporting: dac5571, dac6571, dac7571, dac5574, dac6574, dac7574, dac5573, dac6573 and dac7573 * Meson-adc - Support for Meson AXG with DT bindings. * mpu6050 - Support the mpu9255 which only requires additional WHOAMI entry and compatible string. * st_lsm6dsx - Support for lsm330dlc combinded accelerometer and gyro sensors with DT bindings. * stm32_adc - Add support for STM32MP1 with bindings. Staging graduations * adis16201 after some excelent cleanup by Himanshu Jha. * adis16029 after some excelent cleanup by Shreeya Patel. New features: * ABI docs - Add core ABI docs for angle channels. * inv_mpu6050 - Provide support for the full range of interrupts the device supports. * st_accel - Add SMO8840 ACPI ID seen in the wild on some Lenovo machines. * stx104 - Provide a multiple gpio get function. Cleanups / Minor fixes * core - Use new nested structure support to improve kernel-doc. * ad2s1200 - Use be16_to_cpup instead of opencoding. * ad5686 - Indentation tidy up. - Switch to SPDX - Refactor to allow various numbers of channels. - Refactor to separate core and SPI specific support, prior to addition of i2c equivalent devices. * ad7606 - Use drvdata directly from device rather than boucing via the platform_device structure. * ad7746 - Replace opencoded byte swapped i2c calls with _swapped variants. - White space and line break readability improvements. - Reorder includes and variable declarations where appropriate. * ad7791 - Changes to the AD ADC library used by this driver took in the sampling frequency. This lead to be the wrong path being the one tied to the resulting attribute, so it didn't work, and a warning to be printed. * ad7780 - Remove apparent support for sampling frequency control on devices that don't support changing the sampling attributes. * |
||
---|---|---|
.. | ||
obsolete | ||
removed | ||
stable | ||
testing | ||
README |
This directory attempts to document the ABI between the Linux kernel and userspace, and the relative stability of these interfaces. Due to the everchanging nature of Linux, and the differing maturity levels, these interfaces should be used by userspace programs in different ways. We have four different levels of ABI stability, as shown by the four different subdirectories in this location. Interfaces may change levels of stability according to the rules described below. The different levels of stability are: stable/ This directory documents the interfaces that the developer has defined to be stable. Userspace programs are free to use these interfaces with no restrictions, and backward compatibility for them will be guaranteed for at least 2 years. Most interfaces (like syscalls) are expected to never change and always be available. testing/ This directory documents interfaces that are felt to be stable, as the main development of this interface has been completed. The interface can be changed to add new features, but the current interface will not break by doing this, unless grave errors or security problems are found in them. Userspace programs can start to rely on these interfaces, but they must be aware of changes that can occur before these interfaces move to be marked stable. Programs that use these interfaces are strongly encouraged to add their name to the description of these interfaces, so that the kernel developers can easily notify them if any changes occur (see the description of the layout of the files below for details on how to do this.) obsolete/ This directory documents interfaces that are still remaining in the kernel, but are marked to be removed at some later point in time. The description of the interface will document the reason why it is obsolete and when it can be expected to be removed. removed/ This directory contains a list of the old interfaces that have been removed from the kernel. Every file in these directories will contain the following information: What: Short description of the interface Date: Date created KernelVersion: Kernel version this feature first showed up in. Contact: Primary contact for this interface (may be a mailing list) Description: Long description of the interface and how to use it. Users: All users of this interface who wish to be notified when it changes. This is very important for interfaces in the "testing" stage, so that kernel developers can work with userspace developers to ensure that things do not break in ways that are unacceptable. It is also important to get feedback for these interfaces to make sure they are working in a proper way and do not need to be changed further. How things move between levels: Interfaces in stable may move to obsolete, as long as the proper notification is given. Interfaces may be removed from obsolete and the kernel as long as the documented amount of time has gone by. Interfaces in the testing state can move to the stable state when the developers feel they are finished. They cannot be removed from the kernel tree without going through the obsolete state first. It's up to the developer to place their interfaces in the category they wish for it to start out in. Notable bits of non-ABI, which should not under any circumstances be considered stable: - Kconfig. Userspace should not rely on the presence or absence of any particular Kconfig symbol, in /proc/config.gz, in the copy of .config commonly installed to /boot, or in any invocation of the kernel build process. - Kernel-internal symbols. Do not rely on the presence, absence, location, or type of any kernel symbol, either in System.map files or the kernel binary itself. See Documentation/process/stable-api-nonsense.rst.