[PATCH v2 2/2] Documentation/sphinx: link dma-buf rsts
Jonathan Corbet
corbet at lwn.net
Tue Aug 23 14:16:33 UTC 2016
On Tue, 23 Aug 2016 15:28:55 +0200
Daniel Vetter <daniel at ffwll.ch> wrote:
> I think the more interesting story is, what's your plan with all the
> other driver related subsystem? Especially the ones which already have
> full directories of their own, like e.g. Documentation/gpio/. I think
> those should be really part of the infrastructure section (or
> something equally high-level), together with other awesome servies
> like pwm, regman, irqchip, ... And then there's also the large-scale
> subsystems like media or gpu. What's the plan to tie them all
> together? Personally I'm leaning towards keeping the existing
> directories (where they exist already), but inserting links into the
> overall driver-api section.
To say I have a plan is to overstate things somewhat...
One objective I do have, though, is to declutter Documentation/.
Presenting people looking for docs with a 270-file directory is
unfriendly to say the least. We don't organize the code that way; the
average in the kernel is <... find | wc -l ... > about 15
files/directory, which is rather more manageable. Someday I'd like
Documentation/ to look a lot more like the top-level directory.
It seems to me that we have a few basic types of stuff here:
- Driver API documentation, obviously, is a lot of it, and I would like
to organize it better and to move it out of the top-level directory.
- Hardware usage information - module parameters, sysfs files, supported
hardware information, graphic descriptions of the ancestry of hardware
engineers, etc. The readership for this stuff is quite different, and
I think it should be separate; often it's intertwined with API
information at the moment.
- Other usage information - a lot of what's under filesystems/ for
example, and more.
- Core API documentation.
- Kernel development tools - the stuff I started pulling together into
the dev-tools/ subdirectory.
- How to deal with this unruly mob - SubmittingPatches, CodingStyle,
development-process, etc. There's process stuff, and general
development documents like volatile-considered-harmful.txt or
memory-barriers.txt
We can go a long way by organizing this stuff within the formatted
documentation, but I really think we need to organize the directory
structure as well. I see that as a slow-moving process that will take
years, but I do think it's a direction we should go.
jon
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