On Tue, Jun 04, 2019 at 11:13:02AM -0500, Richard Gong wrote: > > Hi Greg, > > On 6/4/19 9:28 AM, Greg KH wrote: > > On Tue, Jun 04, 2019 at 12:33:03PM +0200, Romain Izard wrote: > > > On Mon, Jun 03, 2019 at 08:02:55PM +0200, Greg KH wrote: > > > > > @@ -394,7 +432,7 @@ static struct platform_driver stratix10_rsu_driver = { > > > > > .remove = stratix10_rsu_remove, > > > > > .driver = { > > > > > .name = "stratix10-rsu", > > > > > - .groups = rsu_groups, > > > > > +// .groups = rsu_groups, > > > > > > > > Are you sure this is the correct pointer? I think that might be > > > > pointing to the driver's attributes, not the device's attributes. > > > > > > > > If platform drivers do not have a way to register groups properly, then > > > > that really needs to be fixed, as trying to register it by yourself as > > > > you are doing, is ripe for racing with userspace. > > > This is a very common issue with platform drivers, and it seems to me that > > > it is not possible to add device attributes when binding a device to a > > > driver without entering the race condition. > > > > > > My understanding is the following one: > > > > > > The root cause is that the device has already been created and reported > > > to the userspace with a KOBJ_ADD uevent before the device and the driver > > > are bound together. On receiving this event, userspace will react, and > > > it will try to read the device's attributes. In parallel the kernel will > > > try to find a matching driver. If a driver is found, the kernel will > > > call the probe function from the driver with the device as a parameter, > > > and if successful a KOBJ_BIND uevent will be sent to userspace, but this > > > is a recent addition. > > > > > > Unfortunately, not all created devices will be bound to a driver, and the > > > existing udev code relies on KOBJ_ADD uevents rather than KOBJ_BIND uevents. > > > If new per-device attributes have been added to the device during the > > > binding stage userspace may or may not see them, depending on when userspace > > > tries to read the device's attributes. > > > > > > I have this possible workaround, but I do not know if it is a good solution: > > > > > > When binding the device and the driver together, create a new device as a > > > child to the current device, and fill its "groups" member to point to the > > > per-device attributes' group. As the device will be created with all the > > > attributes, it will not be affected by the race issues. The functions > > > handling the attributes will need to be modified to use the parents of their > > > "device" parameter, instead of the device itself. Additionnaly, the sysfs > > > location of the attributes will be different, as the child device will show > > > up in the sysfs path. But for a newly introduced device this will not be > > > a problem. > > > > > > Is this a good compromise ? > > > > Not really. You just want the attributes on the platform device itself. > > > > Given the horrible hack that platform devices are today, what's one more > > hack! > > > > Here's a patch below of what should probably be done here. Richard, can > > you change your code to use the new dev_groups pointer in the struct > > platform_driver and this patch and let me know if that works or not? > > > > Note, I've only compiled this code, not tested it... > > > > Your patch works. > > Many thanks for your help! Nice! I guess I need to turn it into a real patch now. Let me do that tonight and see if I can convert some existing drivers to use it as well... thanks, greg k-h