TODO.modules revision 1.6 1 /* $NetBSD: TODO.modules,v 1.6 2016/09/27 22:27:50 pgoyette Exp $ */
2
3 Some notes on the limitations of our current (as of 7.99.35) module
4 subsystem. This list was triggered by an Email exchange between
5 christos and pgoyette.
6
7 1. Builtin drivers can't depend on modularized drivers (the modularized
8 drivers are attempted to load as builtins).
9
10 The assumption is that dependencies are loaded before those
11 modules which depend on them. At load time, a module's
12 undefined global symbols are resolved; if any symbols can't
13 be resolved, the load fails. Similarly, if a module is
14 included in (built-into) the kernel, all of its symbols must
15 be resolvable by the linker, otherwise the link fails.
16
17 There are ways around this (such as, having the parent
18 module's initialization command recursively call the module
19 load code), but they're often gross hacks.
20
21 Another alternative (which is used by ppp) is to provide a
22 "registration" mechanism for the "child" modules, and then when
23 the need for a specific child module is encountered, use
24 module_autoload() to load the child module. Of course, this
25 requires that the parent module know about all potentially
26 loadable children.
27
28 2. Currently, config(1) has no way to "no define" drivers
29
30 3. It is not always obvious by their names which drivers/options
31 correspond to which modules.
32
33 4. Right now critical drivers that would need to be pre-loaded (ffs,
34 exec_elf64) are still built-in so that we don't need to alter the boot
35 blocks to boot.
36
37 This was a conscious decision by core@ some years ago. It is
38 not a requirement that ffs or exec_* be built-in. The only
39 requirement is that the root file-system's module must be
40 available when the module subsystem is initialized, in order
41 to load other modules. This can be accomplished by having the
42 boot loader "push" the module at boot time. (It used to do
43 this in all cases; currently the "push" only occurs if the
44 booted filesystem is not ffs.)
45
46 5. Not all parent bus drivers are capable of rescan, so some drivers
47 just have to be built-in.
48
49 6. Many (most?) drivers are not yet modularized
50
51 7. There's currently no provisions for autoconfig to figure out which
52 modules are needed, and thus to load the required modules.
53
54 In the "normal" built-in world, autoconfigure can only ask
55 existing drivers if they're willing to manage (ie, attach) a
56 device. Removing the built-in drivers tends to limit the
57 availability of possible managers. There's currently no
58 mechanism for identifying and loading drivers based on what
59 devices might be found.
60
61 8. Even for existing modules, there are "surprise" dependencies with
62 code that has not yet been modularized.
63
64 For example, even though the bpf code has been modularized,
65 there is some shared code in bpf_filter.c which is needed by
66 both ipfilter and ppp. ipf is already modularized, but ppp
67 is not. Thus, even though bpf_filter is modular, it MUST be
68 included as a built-in module if you also have ppp in your
69 configuration.
70
71 Another example is sysmon_taskq module. It is required by
72 other parts of the sysmon subsystem, including the
73 "sysmon_power" module. Unfortunately, even though the
74 sysmon_power code is modularized, it is referenced by the
75 acpi code which has not been modularized. Therefore, if your
76 configuration has acpi, then you must include the "sysmon_power"
77 module built-in the kernel. And therefore your also need to
78 have "sysmon_taskq" and "sysmon" built-in since "sysmon_power"
79 rerefences them.
80
81 9. As a corollary to #8 above, having dependencies on modules from code
82 which has not been modularized makes it extremely difficult to test
83 the module code adequately. Testing of module code should include
84 both testing-as-a-built-in module and testing-as-a-loaded-module, and
85 all dependencies need to be identified.
86
87 10.The current /stand/$ARCH/$VERSION/modules/ hierarchy won't scale as
88 we get more and more modules. There are hundreds of potential device
89 driver modules.
90
91 11.There currently isn't any good way to handle attachment-specific
92 modules. The build infrastructure (ie, sys/modules/Makefile) doesn't
93 readily lend itself to bus-specific modules irrespective of $ARCH,
94 and maintaining distrib/sets/lists/modules/* is awkward at best.
95
96 Furthermore, devices such as ld(4), which can attach to a large set
97 of parent devices, need to be modified. The parent devices need to
98 provide a common attribute (for example, ld_bud), and the ld driver
99 should attach to that attribute rather than to each parent. But
100 currently, config(1) doesn't handle this - it doesn't allow an
101 attribute to be used as the device tree's pseudo-root.
102
103 12.Item #11 gets even murkier when a particular parent can provide more
104 than one attribute.
105