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Date:      Wed, 16 Sep 2020 08:07:39 +0000
From:      Grzegorz Junka <list1@gjunka.com>
To:        freebsd-x11@freebsd.org
Subject:   Re: Is there any performance difference between udev and evdev in xorg?
Message-ID:  <7c43526f-c88f-c893-9285-8e2cbf1ead17@gjunka.com>
In-Reply-To: <20200916073731.GA45977@FreeBSD.org>
References:  <CAGBxaX=LvdPgR3sm%2BWL-QXn0%2BQoy1%2BzpvxRgf_1v7Oq4qyNmgA@mail.gmail.com> <20200916040110.GA46039@FreeBSD.org> <9fcf11e9-6466-3660-5322-997ed8cb3ca7@freebsd.org> <20200916073731.GA45977@FreeBSD.org>

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On 16/09/2020 07:37, Alexey Dokuchaev wrote:
> On Wed, Sep 16, 2020 at 08:41:28AM +0200, Niclas Zeising wrote:
>> On 2020-09-16 06:01, Alexey Dokuchaev wrote:
>>> On Tue, Sep 15, 2020 at 10:55:31PM -0400, Aryeh Friedman wrote:
>>>> What if any is the performance difference between udev and evdev when
>>>> configuring xorg?  Also do I need to use one or the other consistently
>>>> or can I intermix them?
>>> If you don't need them (e.g. because this is desktop system without
>>> fancy input devices), you'd better off with disabling both of them
>>> altogether and use good old traditional way, that is, simply install
>>> xf86-input-{keyboard,mouse} and let X.org handle those peripherals.
>>>
>>> Yes, you would still be able to plug and unplug your USB mice and
>>> they will be detected and working as expected.
>>>
>>> TL;DR: DEVD/UDEV support is overrated and usually not needed at all.
>> This is bad advice.
> OK, let's see why is it bad. :-)
>
>> The DEVD support in xorg-server might go away, since it is a FreeBSD
>> only solution and the udev/evdev is similar to what is used on Linux.
> Does this imply that DEVD support in X.org is technically inferior to
> udev/evdev, or it might get deprecated just because they prefer Linux
> way, regardless of the actual design and implementation quality?  Kind
> of tangentially related question, but this might help to foresee what
> to expect from future X.org development.
>

Linux way doesn't mean it's a bad way. As a user I don't really care if 
it's Linux way or not as long as it supports the hardware that I spent 
my money on.

As a developer I do care about a solution that is simpler to code and 
use, but not if it's Linux or not. Can you actually define what you mean 
by Linux way?

However, the most important thing that I care about is that the code I 
am learning and using is copyfree. If someone was kind enough to rewrite 
the whole Linux using a FreeBSD license then I wouldn't mind switching 
to do that to make a better use of the hardware that I have.

GrzegorzJ




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