Re: [RFC PATCH v3 4/6] media: tegra: Add Tegra210 Video input driver

[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]

 



Sure, Will update in v4.

On 2/20/20 5:33 AM, Hans Verkuil wrote:
External email: Use caution opening links or attachments


(Replying to myself so I can explain this a bit more)

On 2/20/20 1:44 PM, Hans Verkuil wrote:
+
+static int tegra_csi_tpg_channels_alloc(struct tegra_csi *csi)
+{
+    struct device_node *node = csi->dev->of_node;
+    unsigned int port_num;
+    int ret;
+    struct tegra_csi_channel *item;
+    unsigned int tpg_channels = csi->soc->csi_max_channels;
+
+    /* allocate CSI channel for each CSI x2 ports */
+    for (port_num = 0; port_num < tpg_channels; port_num++) {
+            item = devm_kzalloc(csi->dev, sizeof(*item), GFP_KERNEL);
Using devm_*alloc can be dangerous. If someone unbinds the driver, then
all memory allocated with devm_ is immediately freed. But if an application
still has a filehandle open, then when it closes it it might still reference
this already-freed memory.

I recommend that you avoid using devm_*alloc for media drivers.
A good test is to unbind & bind the driver:

cd /sys/devices/platform/50000000.host1x/54080000.vi/driver
echo -n 54080000.vi >unbind
echo -n 54080000.vi >bind

First just do this without the driver being used. That already
gives me 'list_del corruption' kernel messages (list debugging
is turned on in my kernel).

Note that this first test is basically identical to a rmmod/modprobe
of the driver. But when I compiled the driver as a module it didn't
create any video device nodes! Nor did I see any errors in the kernel
log. I didn't pursue this, and perhaps I did something wrong, but it's
worth taking a look at.

The next step would be to have a video node open with:

v4l2-ctl --sleep 10

then while it is sleeping unbind the driver and see what happens
when v4l2-ctl exits.

Worst case is when you are streaming:

v4l2-ctl --stream-mmap

and then unbind.

In general, the best way to get this to work correctly is:

1) don't use devm_*alloc
2) set the release callback of struct v4l2_device and do all freeing there.
3) in the platform remove() callback you call media_device_unregister()
    and video_unregister_device().

It's worth getting this right in this early stage, rather than fixing it
in the future.

Regards,

         Hans



[Index of Archives]     [Device Tree Compilter]     [Device Tree Spec]     [Linux Driver Backports]     [Video for Linux]     [Linux USB Devel]     [Linux PCI Devel]     [Linux Audio Users]     [Linux Kernel]     [Linux SCSI]     [XFree86]     [Yosemite Backpacking]


  Powered by Linux