Hi Geert, Thank you for the patch. I'd still like to hear the device tree maintainers' (added to Cc:) opinion on parsing the whole DT for "resets" phandle properties to find shared resets like this. On Thu, 2018-09-27 at 20:00 +0200, Geert Uytterhoeven wrote: > In some SoCs multiple hardware blocks may share a reset control. > The reset control API for shared resets will only assert such a reset > when the drivers for all hardware blocks agree. > The exclusive reset control API still allows to assert such a reset, but > that impacts all other hardware blocks sharing the reset. > > While the kernel doc comments clearly state that the API for shared > resets applies to reset controls which are shared between hardware > blocks, the exact meaning of exclusive resets is not documented. > Fix the semantic ambiguity with respect to exclusive access vs. > exclusive reset lines by: > 1. Clarifying that exclusive resets really are intended for use with > reset controls which are dedicated to a single hardware block, > 2. Ensuring that obtaining an exclusive reset control will fail if the > reset is shared by multiple hardware blocks, for both DT-based and > lookup-based reset controls. > > Signed-off-by: Geert Uytterhoeven <geert+renesas@xxxxxxxxx> > --- > This is v2 of "[RFC] reset: Add support for dedicated reset controls": > - Fix wrong variable in __reset_is_dedicated() loop, > - Add missing of_node_put() in __of_reset_is_dedicated(), > - Document that exclusive reset controls imply they are dedicated to a > single hardware block, > - Drop new dedicated flag and new API reset_control_get_dedicated(), > as exclusive already implies dedicated, > - Rename {__of_,}reset_is_dedicated() to {__of_,}reset_is_exclusive(), > - Reword description. > > Note: Exclusive lookup-based reset controls were not tested. > --- > drivers/reset/core.c | 58 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ > include/linux/reset.h | 5 +++- > 2 files changed, 62 insertions(+), 1 deletion(-) > > diff --git a/drivers/reset/core.c b/drivers/reset/core.c > index 225e34c56b94a2e3..2f5b61226c7964eb 100644 > --- a/drivers/reset/core.c > +++ b/drivers/reset/core.c > @@ -459,6 +459,38 @@ static void __reset_control_put_internal(struct reset_control *rstc) > kref_put(&rstc->refcnt, __reset_control_release); > } > > +static bool __of_reset_is_exclusive(const struct device_node *node, > + const struct of_phandle_args args) > +{ > + struct of_phandle_args args2; > + struct device_node *node2; > + int index, ret; > + bool eq; I suppose it is very unlikely to get false positives where an arbitrary node contains a "resets" property that looks like a proper phandle to an actual reset-controller node. Are we allowed though to scan the whole tree for "resets" properties regardless of the nodes' bindings or compatible properties like this? > + for_each_node_with_property(node2, "resets") { > + if (node == node2) > + continue; > + > + for (index = 0; ; index++) { > + ret = of_parse_phandle_with_args(node2, "resets", > + "#reset-cells", index, > + &args2); > + if (ret) > + break; > + > + eq = (args2.np == args.np && > + args2.args_count == args.args_count && > + !memcmp(args2.args, args.args, > + args.args_count * sizeof(args.args[0]))); > + of_node_put(args2.np); > + if (eq) Emitting a loud warning here could be very helpful if it contains both the reset controller node and the reset index, as well as the consumer nodes: node and node2. > + return false; > + } > + } > + return true; > +} > + > struct reset_control *__of_reset_control_get(struct device_node *node, > const char *id, int index, bool shared, > bool optional) > @@ -514,6 +546,11 @@ struct reset_control *__of_reset_control_get(struct device_node *node, > return ERR_PTR(rstc_id); > } > > + if (!shared && !__of_reset_is_exclusive(node, args)) { > + mutex_unlock(&reset_list_mutex); > + return ERR_PTR(-EINVAL); > + } > + > /* reset_list_mutex also protects the rcdev's reset_control list */ > rstc = __reset_control_get_internal(rcdev, rstc_id, shared); > > @@ -541,6 +578,22 @@ __reset_controller_by_name(const char *name) > return NULL; > } > > +static bool __reset_is_exclusive(const struct reset_control_lookup *lookup) > +{ > + const struct reset_control_lookup *lookup2; > + > + list_for_each_entry(lookup2, &reset_lookup_list, list) { > + if (lookup2 == lookup) > + continue; > + > + if (lookup2->provider == lookup->provider && > + lookup2->index == lookup->index) > + return false; > + } > + > + return true; > +} > + > static struct reset_control * > __reset_control_get_from_lookup(struct device *dev, const char *con_id, > bool shared, bool optional) > @@ -562,6 +615,11 @@ __reset_control_get_from_lookup(struct device *dev, const char *con_id, > if ((!con_id && !lookup->con_id) || > ((con_id && lookup->con_id) && > !strcmp(con_id, lookup->con_id))) { > + if (!shared && !__reset_is_exclusive(lookup)) { > + mutex_unlock(&reset_lookup_mutex); > + return ERR_PTR(-EINVAL); > + } > + > mutex_lock(&reset_list_mutex); > rcdev = __reset_controller_by_name(lookup->provider); > if (!rcdev) { > diff --git a/include/linux/reset.h b/include/linux/reset.h > index 29af6d6b2f4b8103..5881d2594761e48f 100644 > --- a/include/linux/reset.h > +++ b/include/linux/reset.h > @@ -116,8 +116,11 @@ static inline int device_reset_optional(struct device *dev) > * @id: reset line name > * > * Returns a struct reset_control or IS_ERR() condition containing errno. > - * If this function is called more than once for the same reset_control it will > + * If this function is called more than once for the same reset control it will > * return -EBUSY. > + * This function is intended for use with reset controls which are dedicated > + * to a single hardware block. If called for a reset control shared among > + * multiple hardware blocks, it will return -EINVAL. > * > * See reset_control_get_shared for details on shared references to > * reset-controls. regards Philipp