On Tue, Apr 24, 2018 at 07:04:16PM +0300, Jyri Sarha wrote: > On 24/04/18 13:14, Peter Rosin wrote: > > On 2018-04-24 10:08, Russell King - ARM Linux wrote: > >> On Tue, Apr 24, 2018 at 08:58:42AM +0200, Peter Rosin wrote: > >>> On 2018-04-23 18:08, Russell King - ARM Linux wrote: > >>>> On Mon, Apr 23, 2018 at 09:23:00AM +0200, Peter Rosin wrote: > >>>>> static int tda998x_remove(struct i2c_client *client) > >>>>> { > >>>>> - component_del(&client->dev, &tda998x_ops); > >>>>> + struct device *dev = &client->dev; > >>>>> + struct tda998x_bridge *bridge = dev_get_drvdata(dev); > >>>>> + > >>>>> + drm_bridge_remove(&bridge->bridge); > >>>>> + component_del(dev, &tda998x_ops); > >>>>> + > >>>> > >>>> I'd like to ask a rather fundamental question about DRM bridge support, > >>>> because I suspect that there's a major fsckup here. > >>>> > >>>> The above is the function that deals with the TDA998x device being > >>>> unbound from the driver. With the component API, this results in the > >>>> DRM device correctly being torn down, because one of the hardware > >>>> devices has gone. > >>>> > >>>> With DRM bridge, the bridge is merely removed from the list of > >>>> bridges: > >>>> > >>>> void drm_bridge_remove(struct drm_bridge *bridge) > >>>> { > >>>> mutex_lock(&bridge_lock); > >>>> list_del_init(&bridge->list); > >>>> mutex_unlock(&bridge_lock); > >>>> } > >>>> EXPORT_SYMBOL(drm_bridge_remove); > >>>> > >>>> and the memory backing the "struct tda998x_bridge" (which contains > >>>> the struct drm_bridge) will be freed by the devm subsystem. > >>>> > >>>> However, there is no notification into the rest of the DRM subsystem > >>>> that the device has gone away. Worse, the memory that is still in > >>>> use by DRM has now been freed, so further use of the DRM device > >>>> results in a use-after-free bug. > >>>> > >>>> This is really not good, and to me looks like a fundamental problem > >>>> with the DRM bridge code. I see nothing in the DRM bridge code that > >>>> deals with the lifetime of a "DRM bridge" or indeed the lifetime of > >>>> the actual device itself. > >>>> > >>>> So, from what I can see, there seems to be a fundamental lifetime > >>>> issue with the design of the DRM bridge code. This needs to be > >>>> fixed. > >>> > >>> Oh crap. A gigantic can of worms... > >> > >> Yes, it's especially annoying for me, having put the effort in to > >> the component helper to cover all these cases. > >> > >>> Would a patch (completely untested btw) along this line of thinking make > >>> any difference whatsoever? > >> > >> It looks interesting - from what I can see of the device links code, > >> it would have the effect of unbinding the DRM device just before > >> TDA998x is unbound, so that's an improvement. > >> > >> However, from what I can see, the link vanishes at that point (as > >> DL_FLAG_AUTOREMOVE is set), and re-binding the TDA998x device results > >> in nothing further happening - the link will be recreated, but there > >> appears to be nothing that triggers the "consumer" to rebind at that > >> point. Maybe I've missed something? > > > > Right, auto-remove is a no-go. So, improving on the previous... > > > > (I think drm_panel might suffer from this issue too?) > > Yes it does and I took a shot at trying to fix it at the end of the > previous merge window, but gave up as I run out of time. I re-spun the > work now after reading this thread. I add you and Russell to cc. Right, and these exact problems are what the component helper is there to sort out, in a subsystem independent way. What is the problem with the component helper that people seem to be soo loathed to use it, instead preferring to come up with sub- standard and broken alternatives? -- RMK's Patch system: http://www.armlinux.org.uk/developer/patches/ FTTC broadband for 0.8mile line in suburbia: sync at 8.8Mbps down 630kbps up According to speedtest.net: 8.21Mbps down 510kbps up -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe devicetree" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html