On Fri, Jul 10, 2020 at 5:02 PM Douglas Anderson <dianders@xxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > I found that if I ever had a little mistake in my kernel config, > or device tree, or graphics driver that my system would sit in a loop > at bootup trying again and again and again. An example log was: Why do we care about optimizing the error case? > msm ae00000.mdss: bound ae01000.mdp (ops 0xffffffe596e951f8) > msm_dsi ae94000.dsi: ae94000.dsi supply gdsc not found, using dummy regulator > msm_dsi_manager_register: failed to register mipi dsi host for DSI 0 > [drm:ti_sn_bridge_probe] *ERROR* could not find any panel node > ... > > I finally tracked it down where this was happening: > - msm_pdev_probe() is called. > - msm_pdev_probe() registers drivers. Registering drivers kicks > off processing of probe deferrals. > - component_master_add_with_match() could return -EPROBE_DEFER. > making msm_pdev_probe() return -EPROBE_DEFER. > - When msm_pdev_probe() returned the processing of probe deferrals > happens. > - Loop back to the start. > > It looks like we can fix this by marking "mdss" as a "simple-bus". > I have no idea if people consider this the right thing to do or a > hack. Hopefully it's the right thing to do. :-) It's a simple test. Do the child devices have any dependency on the parent to probe and/or function? If so, not a simple-bus. > Once I do this I notice that my boot gets marginally faster (you > don't need to probe the sub devices over and over) and also if I Can you quantify that? Have you run with devlinks enabled. You need a command line option to enable. That too should reduce deferred probes. > have a problem it doesn't loop forever (on my system it still > gets upset about some stuck clocks in that case, but at least I > can boot up). Deferred probe only runs when a device is added, so it's not like it is continually running. Rob