On Thu, 2024-10-10 at 17:46 +0300, Andy Shevchenko wrote:
> On Wed, Oct 09, 2024 at 10:35:08AM +0200, Philipp Stanner wrote:
> > pci_intx() is a hybrid function which can sometimes be managed
> > through
> > devres. To remove this hybrid nature from pci_intx(), it is
> > necessary to
> > port users to either an always-managed or a never-managed version.
> >
> > hda_intel enables its PCI-Device with pcim_enable_device(). Thus,
> > it needs
> > the always-managed version.
> >
> > Replace pci_intx() with pcim_intx().
>
> ...
>
> > bus->irq = chip->pci->irq;
> > chip->card->sync_irq = bus->irq;
> > - pci_intx(chip->pci, !chip->msi);
> > + pcim_intx(chip->pci, !chip->msi);
> > return 0;
>
> I believe each driver needs an individual approach. Looking at the
> above
> I would first to understand why this one is being used and why we
> can't
> switch to pci{m}_alloc_irq_vectors(). (Yeah, managed
> pci_alloc_irq_vectors()
> is probably still missing, I don't remember if you introduced it or
> not.
>
Alright alright – we touched it in the other mail briefly, but let me
point out another specific problem:
pci_alloc_irq_vectors() *uses* pci_intx(). And pci_intx() can be
managed sometimes.
See the problem? :(
So it's not just that I couldn't port the driver Alex is concerned
about, it's also that MSI itself is a user of pci_intx().
So a pcim_alloc_irq_vectors() might end up doing double-devres or God
knows what else. Only once pci_intx() is clean one can start thinking
about the code in pci/msi/
It's the biggest reason why I want to clean it up as suggested here,
and also why the only patch I'm really nervous about is number 8.
P.
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