On 11/12/2015 03:20 PM, Lars-Peter Clausen wrote:
> On 11/12/2015 11:59 AM, Jon Hunter wrote:
>>
>> On 11/11/15 15:41, Grygorii Strashko wrote:
>>> On 11/11/2015 12:13 PM, Jon Hunter wrote:
>>>>
>>>> On 10/11/15 18:07, Lars-Peter Clausen wrote:
>>>>> On 11/10/2015 05:47 PM, Grygorii Strashko wrote:
>>>>> [...]
>>>>>>> I was trying to simplify matters by placing the resume call in
>>>>>>> __setup_irq() as opposed to requested_threaded_irq(). However, the would
>>>>>>> mean the resume is inside the bus_lock and may be I should not assume
>>>>>>> that I can sleep here.
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>> Can you folks please agree on something which is correct and complete?
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> Soren I am happy to defer to your patch and drop this. My only comment
>>>>>>> would be what about the request_percpu_irq() path in your patch?
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>
>>>>>> I have the same comment here as I asked Soren:
>>>>>> 1) There are no restrictions to call irq set_irq_type() whenever,
>>>>>> as result HW can be accessed before request_x_irq()/__setup_irq().
>>>>>> And this is used quite widely now :(
>>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>> Changing the configuration of a resource that is not owned seems to be
>>>>> fairly broken. In the worst case this will overwrite the configuration 
>>>>> that
>>>>> was set by owner of the resource.
>>>>>
>>>>> Especially those that call irq_set_irq_type() directly before 
>>>>> request_irq(),
>>>>> given that you supply the trigger type to request_irq() which will make 
>>>>> sure
>>>>> that there are no conflicts and the configure.
>>>>>
>>>>> This is a bit like calling gpio_set_direction() before you call
>>>>> gpio_request(), which will also have PM issues.
>>>>
>>>> Yes, I agree that this does sound a bit odd, but ...
>>>>
>>>>>> For example, during OF boot:
>>>>>>
>>>>>> [a]  irq_create_of_mapping()
>>>>>>      - irq_create_fwspec_mapping()
>>>>>>        - irq_set_irq_type()
>>>>
>>>> The above means that if someone calls of_irq_get() (or
>>>> platform_get_irq()), before request_irq(), then this will call
>>>> irq_create_of_mapping() and hence, call irq_set_irq_type. So should
>>>> irq_create_fwspec_mapping() be setting the type in the first place? I
>>>> can see it is convenient to do it here.
>>>
>>> In general there is another option - save OF-flags and pass them to
>>> __setup_irq() where they can be processed.
>>
>> Right, we could look at doing something like this.
>>
>>>>>> or
>>> [b]
>>>>>>  irq_set_irq_type(irq, IRQ_TYPE_LEVEL_HIGH);
>>>>>>  irq_set_chained_handler(irq, mx31ads_expio_irq_handler);
>>>
>>> option: add "flag" parameter to irq_set_chained_handler
>>>
>>>>>>
>>>>>> or
>>> [c]
>>>>>>  irq_set_irq_type(alarm_irq, IRQ_TYPE_EDGE_BOTH);
>>>>>>  err = devm_request_irq(&pdev->dev, alarm_irq, fan_alarm_irq_handler,
>>>>>> (there are ~200 occurrences of irq set_irq_type in Kernel)
>>>>>>
>>>>>> 2) if i'm not wrong, the same is valid for irq_set_irq_wake() and 
>>>>>> irq_set_affinity()
>>>>>>
>>>>>> I'm not saying all these code is correct, but that what's now in kernel 
>>>>>> :(
>>>>>> I've tried to test Soren's patch with omap-gpio and immediately hit case 
>>>>>> [a] :.(
>>>>>
>>>>> All functions for which are part of the public API and for which it is 
>>>>> legal
>>>>> to call them without calling request_irq() (or similar) first will need to
>>>>> have pm_get()/pm_put().
>>>>
>>>> Right. May be we can look at the various entry points to the chip
>>>> operators to get a feel for which public APIs need to be handled.
>>>
>>>
>>> Seems yes. But we need to be very careful with this, some of functions 
>>> could be
>>> called recursively (nested), like:
>>> [d]
>>> static int pcf857x_irq_set_wake(struct irq_data *data, unsigned int on)
>>> {
>>>     ...
>>>     error = irq_set_irq_wake(gpio->irq_parent, on);
>>>
>>>
>>> Personally, I have nothing against irq_pm_(get|put) :) and thought about 
>>> similar things
>>> when tried to solve the same problem for omap-gpio driver.
>>> But :(, I have to fall back to irq_bus_lock/sync_unlock, because of [a,b,c] 
>>> - all above
>>> APIs surrounded by chip_bus_lock/chip_bus_sync_unlock. ([d] - I've not hit 
>>> it just because
>>> I was lucky).
>>
>> I had a quick peek at the omap-gpio driver and I see that internally you
>> are using the gpio ref-count to manage RPM and use the bus-lock hooks to
>> invoke RPM.
>>
>> This can definitely be complex when considering all the potential paths,
>> but I think that we need to a look at this from a chip-ops perspective
>> because only the chip knows if it is accessible or not. That said, what
>> we need to assess is:
>>
>> 1. Which chip-ops should ONLY be called after an IRQ has been allocated
>>     (eg, enable/disable, mask/unmask, type, etc). These chip-ops should
>>     not try to control the chip PM, but should possibly WARN if called
>>     when  the chip is not accessible.
>> 2. For chip-ops that may be called without allocating an IRQ (eg.
>>     bus_lock, irq_suspend, etc), can these be called from an atomic
>>     context? If they might be called from an atomic context then these
>>     are the chip-ops which will cause problems as we cannot guarantee
>>     that all IRQ chips can support irq-safe RPM.
> 
> They can't. chip_bus_lock() can sleep, so anything that locks the bus can't
> be called from atomic context.
> 
> One easy way out might be to always call pm_get/pm_but from
> bus_lock,/bus_unlock. This way the chip is guaranteed to be powered up when
> accessed happens. In addition pm_get is called when the IRQ is request and
> pm_put is called when the IRQ is release, this is to ensure the chip stays
> powered when it is actively monitoring the IRQ lines.
> 

In general, this is simplest possible solution. More over, if irqchip will have
dev field PM runtime could be used directly instead of get/put.  

but.. :( How about problem [d]?

-- 
regards,
-grygorii
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