On 07-12-20, 09:31, Pierre-Louis Bossart wrote: > On 12/6/20 10:43 PM, Vinod Koul wrote: > > On 05-12-20, 08:59, Pierre-Louis Bossart wrote: > > > Thanks for the review Vinod. > > > > > > On 12/5/20 1:45 AM, Vinod Koul wrote: > > > > On 03-12-20, 04:46, Bard Liao wrote: > > > > > From: Pierre-Louis Bossart <pierre-louis.bossart@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> > > > > > > > > > > When a Slave device is resumed, it may resume the bus and restart the > > > > > enumeration. During that process, we absolutely don't want to call > > > > > regular read/write routines which will wait for the resume to > > > > > complete, otherwise a deadlock occurs. > > > > > > > > > > Fixes: 60ee9be25571 ('soundwire: bus: add PM/no-PM versions of read/write functions') > > > > > > > > Change looks okay, but not sure why this is a fix for adding no pm > > > > version? > > > > > > when we added the no_pm version, we missed the two cases below where > > > sdw_update() was used and that creates a deadlock. To me that's a conceptual > > > bug, we didn't fully use the no_pm versions, hence the Fixes tag. > > > > Documentation says: > > "A Fixes: tag indicates that the patch fixes an issue in a previous commit. It > > is used to make it easy to determine where a bug originated, which can help > > review a bug fix. This tag also assists the stable kernel team in determining > > which stable kernel versions should receive your fix. This is the preferred > > method for indicating a bug fixed by the patch. See :ref:`describe_changes` > > for more details." > > > > I do not this this helps here as this does not help distros etc > > I would say this is incremental development which improved a case not > > done properly earlier, unless you would like this to be backported.. In > > that case it helps folks... > > IMHO the changes in the series are absolutely required to have a reliable > suspend-resume operation and will need to be back-ported. When I said > 'conceptual bug', I didn't mean a hypothetical case, I really meant that a > proven race condition and timeouts will occur. That's not good... We will > provide the list of this patches to distros that are known to support > SoundWire as a 'must apply'. > > If you look at the series, we provided Fixes tags for all patches except > 'cosmetic' ones which don't fundamentally change the behavior (Patch 3, > patch 7) or when the code has not reached Linus' tree (patch 5). > > That said, 5.10 was the first release where SoundWire started to be > functional so there's no need to apply these patches to earlier versions of > the stable tree. > > Does this help? Yes, that helps, thanks -- ~Vinod