On Fri, Nov 14, 2014 at 09:08:17AM -0800, Tony Lindgren wrote: > * Felipe Balbi <balbi@xxxxxx> [141114 08:20]: > > On Thu, Nov 13, 2014 at 09:40:31AM -0800, Tony Lindgren wrote: > > > +/** > > > + * handle_wakeirq_thread - call device runtime pm calls on wake-up interrupt > > > + * @wakeirq: device specific wake-up interrupt > > > + * @dev_id: struct device entry > > > + */ > > > +irqreturn_t handle_wakeirq_thread(int wakeirq, void *dev_id) > > > +{ > > > + struct device *dev = dev_id; > > > + irqreturn_t ret = IRQ_NONE; > > > + > > > + if (pm_runtime_suspended(dev)) { > > > + pm_runtime_mark_last_busy(dev); > > > + pm_request_resume(dev); > > > > this assumes that every driver's ->resume() callback has a: > > > > if (pending) > > handle_pending_irqs(); > > > > which might not be very nice. I'd rather follow what Thomas suggested > > and always pass device irq so this can mark it pending. Keep in mind > > that we *don't* need a pm_runtime_get_sync() in every IRQ handler > > because of that. Adding it is but the easiest way to get things working > > and, quite frankly, very silly. > > > > what we want is rather: > > > > irqreturn_t my_handler(int irq, void *dev_id) > > { > > struct device *dev = dev_id; > > > > if (pm_runtime_suspended(dev)) { > > pending_irqs_to_be_handled_from_runtime_resume = true; > > pm_runtime_get(dev); > > clear_irq_source(dev); > > return IRQ_HANDLED; > > } > > } > > > > or something similar. > > Yeah I'll take a look. note that at the end of the day, the outcome will be pretty similar, but with the added benefit that current users of pm_runtime_irq_safe() can be updated as time allows, rather than in one go. > > > + ret = IRQ_HANDLED; > > > + } > > > > you're not masking the wake irq here which means that when this handler > > returns, wake irq will be unmasked by core IRQ subsystem leaving it > > unmasked after ->resume(). > > It currently assumes the consumer driver takes care of it. But I get > your point, we should be able to automate this further. right, consumer calls disable_irq() and that's fine, should be there anyway, but currently you still have a window where wakeirq will be unmasked, if you look at irq_finalize_oneshot(), it's easy to see that it will unmask wakeirq after ->thread_fn() runs: 686 static void irq_finalize_oneshot(struct irq_desc *desc, 687 struct irqaction *action) 688 { [...] 726 if (!desc->threads_oneshot && !irqd_irq_disabled(&desc->irq_data) && 727 irqd_irq_masked(&desc->irq_data)) 728 unmask_threaded_irq(desc); 729 730 out_unlock: 731 raw_spin_unlock_irq(&desc->lock); 732 chip_bus_sync_unlock(desc); 733 } [...] 800 static irqreturn_t irq_thread_fn(struct irq_desc *desc, 801 struct irqaction *action) 802 { 803 irqreturn_t ret; 804 805 ret = action->thread_fn(action->irq, action->dev_id); 806 irq_finalize_oneshot(desc, action); 807 return ret; 808 } so, ->thread_fn() returns and wakeirq is unmasked. You don't know when your ->runtime_resume() will be scheduled, which means that wakeirq could be unmasked for quite a while and it could refire depending on PCB layout. The problem should be minimal, but it's there anyway. Also, you know that once the runtime is resumed, you don't want wakeirq to be unmasked, so why not just mask it from handle_wake_irq() ? Another thing, this assumes that drivers are using pm_runtime and, furthermore, it assumes that drivers' ->runtime_resume() will properly handle pending IRQs. This is definitely not the case for most drivers. Note that quite a few of them aren't either using pm_runtime or have blank/NULL runtime callbacks. Due to these, I think Thomas' suggestion of setting device IRQ pending is the best solution. That takes care of all cases. If drivers are using pm_runtime, then they are required to check if device is still pm_runtime_suspended from IRQ handler, for those who aren't, they can assume device is ready to handle IRQs once the IRQ handler is called. > And right now there's also a dependency on dev->power.irq_safe so > RPM_ASYNC is not set. And this all should ideally work even with runtime > PM not set as it's also needed for resume from suspend. exactly. -- balbi
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