Adaptation/GUID-FD8634B8-E522-4AC4-8129-ED807A7754A2-GENID-1-2-1-9-1-5-1-6-1.dita
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     1 <?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?>
       
     2 <!-- Copyright (c) 2007-2010 Nokia Corporation and/or its subsidiary(-ies) All rights reserved. -->
       
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     5 and is available at the URL "http://www.eclipse.org/legal/epl-v10.html". -->
       
     6 <!-- Initial Contributors:
       
     7     Nokia Corporation - initial contribution.
       
     8 Contributors: 
       
     9 -->
       
    10 <!DOCTYPE concept
       
    11   PUBLIC "-//OASIS//DTD DITA Concept//EN" "concept.dtd">
       
    12 <concept id="GUID-FD8634B8-E522-4AC4-8129-ED807A7754A2-GENID-1-2-1-9-1-5-1-6-1" xml:lang="en"><title>Kernel-side
       
    13 Implementation</title><shortdesc>This document describes kernel-side implementation of requests
       
    14 to device drivers.</shortdesc><prolog><metadata><keywords/></metadata></prolog><conbody>
       
    15 <p>Requests from the user-side are initially handled by the driver
       
    16 in the context of the client user-side thread. All requests are passed to
       
    17 the "gateway" function: <xref href="GUID-E7550422-5121-3393-A85E-BB797969CD2A.dita#GUID-E7550422-5121-3393-A85E-BB797969CD2A/GUID-FD4DA73F-45E7-37BE-9380-1D8ED36114F7"><apiname>DLogicalChannelBase::Request()</apiname></xref>.
       
    18 This is defined as pure virtual in <codeph>DLogicalChannelBase</codeph>, and
       
    19 needs to be implemented in a derived class as part of your logical channel
       
    20 implementation. </p>
       
    21 <fig id="GUID-0DEEF003-53B6-5892-8FF2-6684BC424E27-GENID-1-2-1-9-1-5-1-6-1-3-2">
       
    22 <title>                 Device driver logical channel communication      
       
    23         </title>
       
    24 <image href="GUID-4A2E212E-BC1B-5965-9A62-6309CC7CAAAB_d0e61647_href.png" placement="inline"/>
       
    25 </fig>
       
    26 <p>There are two options for implementing this: </p>
       
    27 <ol id="GUID-F9FDC221-82F8-569E-B12A-969194137E24-GENID-1-2-1-9-1-5-1-6-1-3-4">
       
    28 <li id="GUID-A58B2511-6058-5DE6-8407-0ED4EB7A0112-GENID-1-2-1-9-1-5-1-6-1-3-4-1"><p>Use the ready-made framework
       
    29 provided by the <xref href="GUID-A3CC1D95-4681-3349-A67C-F113A614041D.dita"><apiname>DLogicalChannel</apiname></xref> class, which handles a
       
    30 request in the context of a single kernel-side thread. This framework uses
       
    31 the kernel-side messaging mechanism for queuing requests on a DFC that runs
       
    32 in that single kernel-side thread. </p> <p>In practice, this model makes the
       
    33 writing of device drivers easier because the same kernel thread can be used
       
    34 to process requests from (potentially multiple) user-side clients and DFCs,
       
    35 thus in effect serialising access to the device driver, and eliminating thread-related
       
    36 issues, such as the need to know about mutexes, pre-emption, etc. Several
       
    37 drivers can use the same request/DFC kernel thread to reduce resource usage. </p> </li>
       
    38 <li id="GUID-DE277962-5BDC-5CD7-9868-65FA576E11AD-GENID-1-2-1-9-1-5-1-6-1-3-4-2"><p>Derive your own logical
       
    39 channel class from <xref href="GUID-E7550422-5121-3393-A85E-BB797969CD2A.dita"><apiname>DLogicalChannelBase</apiname></xref> to handle requests.
       
    40 This allows you to build your own thread model for running DFCs to handle
       
    41 requests and to handle request completion. This requires that you manage inter-thread
       
    42 conflicts. However, your design may give you the chance to do some optimisation
       
    43 by handling some requests in the context of the user-side thread, minimising
       
    44 context-switching overhead. </p> </li>
       
    45 </ol>
       
    46 <p>Option 1 lets you get a new driver up and running quickly. Option 2 gives
       
    47 you greater flexibility if the requirements of your driver demand it. </p>
       
    48 </conbody></concept>