Quoting Doug Anderson (2019-05-23 09:38:13) > Hi, > > On Tue, Apr 30, 2019 at 9:38 PM Bjorn Andersson > <bjorn.andersson@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > > +static int qmp_qdss_clk_add(struct qmp *qmp) > > +{ > > + struct clk_init_data qdss_init = { > > + .ops = &qmp_qdss_clk_ops, > > + .name = "qdss", > > + }; > > Can't qdss_init be "static const"? That had the advantage of not > needing to construct it on the stack and also of it having a longer > lifetime. It looks like clk_register() stores the "hw" pointer in its > structure and the "hw" structure will have a pointer here. While I > can believe that it never looks at it again, it's nice if that pointer > doesn't point somewhere on an old stack. > > I suppose we could go the other way and try to mark more stuff in this > module as __init and __initdata, but even then at least the pointer > won't be onto a stack. ;-) > Const would be nice, but otherwise making it static isn't a good idea. The clk_init_data structure is all copied over, although we do leave a dangling pointer to it stored inside the clk_hw structure we don't use it after clk registration. Maybe we should overwrite the pointer with NULL once we're done in clk_register() so that clk providers can't use it. It might break somebody but would at least clarify this point. diff --git a/drivers/clk/clk.c b/drivers/clk/clk.c index aa51756fd4d6..56997a974408 100644 --- a/drivers/clk/clk.c +++ b/drivers/clk/clk.c @@ -3438,9 +3438,9 @@ static int clk_cpy_name(const char **dst_p, const char *src, bool must_exist) return 0; } -static int clk_core_populate_parent_map(struct clk_core *core) +static int clk_core_populate_parent_map(struct clk_core *core, + const struct clk_init_data *init) { - const struct clk_init_data *init = core->hw->init; u8 num_parents = init->num_parents; const char * const *parent_names = init->parent_names; const struct clk_hw **parent_hws = init->parent_hws; @@ -3520,6 +3520,14 @@ __clk_register(struct device *dev, struct device_node *np, struct clk_hw *hw) { int ret; struct clk_core *core; + const struct clk_init_data *init = hw->init; + + /* + * The init data is not supposed to be used outside of registration path. + * Set it to NULL so that provider drivers can't use it either and so that + * we catch use of hw->init early on in the core. + */ + hw->init = NULL; core = kzalloc(sizeof(*core), GFP_KERNEL); if (!core) { @@ -3527,17 +3535,17 @@ __clk_register(struct device *dev, struct device_node *np, struct clk_hw *hw) goto fail_out; } - core->name = kstrdup_const(hw->init->name, GFP_KERNEL); + core->name = kstrdup_const(init->name, GFP_KERNEL); if (!core->name) { ret = -ENOMEM; goto fail_name; } - if (WARN_ON(!hw->init->ops)) { + if (WARN_ON(!init->ops)) { ret = -EINVAL; goto fail_ops; } - core->ops = hw->init->ops; + core->ops = init->ops; if (dev && pm_runtime_enabled(dev)) core->rpm_enabled = true; @@ -3546,13 +3554,13 @@ __clk_register(struct device *dev, struct device_node *np, struct clk_hw *hw) if (dev && dev->driver) core->owner = dev->driver->owner; core->hw = hw; - core->flags = hw->init->flags; - core->num_parents = hw->init->num_parents; + core->flags = init->flags; + core->num_parents = init->num_parents; core->min_rate = 0; core->max_rate = ULONG_MAX; hw->core = core; - ret = clk_core_populate_parent_map(core); + ret = clk_core_populate_parent_map(core, init); if (ret) goto fail_parents; > > > > +static void qmp_pd_remove(struct qmp *qmp) > > +{ > > + struct genpd_onecell_data *data = &qmp->pd_data; > > + struct device *dev = qmp->dev; > > + int i; > > + > > + of_genpd_del_provider(dev->of_node); > > + > > + for (i = 0; i < data->num_domains; i++) > > + pm_genpd_remove(data->domains[i]); > > Still feels like the above loop would be better as: > for (i = data->num_domains - 1; i >= 0; i--) > Reason being to remove in reverse order? Otherwise this looks like an opinion.