On 24/03/2023 18:07, Marek Szyprowski wrote: > On 06.02.2023 17:12, Krzysztof Kozlowski wrote: >> On 03/02/2023 23:50, Marek Szyprowski wrote: >>> On 03.02.2023 22:12, Krzysztof Kozlowski wrote: >>>> On 03/02/2023 21:34, Krzysztof Kozlowski wrote: >>>>> On 03/02/2023 12:51, Marek Szyprowski wrote: >>>>>> On 03.02.2023 12:46, Krzysztof Kozlowski wrote: >>>>>>> On 03/02/2023 12:45, Marek Szyprowski wrote: >>>>>>>> On 29.01.2023 11:42, Krzysztof Kozlowski wrote: >>>>>>>>> On 25/01/2023 10:45, Krzysztof Kozlowski wrote: >>>>>>>>>> The soc node is supposed to have only device nodes with MMIO addresses, >>>>>>>>>> as reported by dtc W=1: >>>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>>> exynos4412.dtsi:407.20-413.5: >>>>>>>>>> Warning (simple_bus_reg): /soc/bus-acp: missing or empty reg/ranges property >>>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>>> and dtbs_check: >>>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>>> exynos4412-i9300.dtb: soc: bus-acp: >>>>>>>>>> {'compatible': ['samsung,exynos-bus'], 'clocks': [[7, 456]], 'clock-names': ['bus'], 'operating-points-v2': [[132]], 'status': ['okay'], 'devfreq': [[117]]} should not be valid under {'type': 'object'} >>>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>>> Move the bus nodes and their OPP tables out of SoC to fix this. >>>>>>>>>> Re-order them alphabetically while moving and put some of the OPP tables >>>>>>>>>> in device nodes (if they are not shared). >>>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>> Applied. >>>>>>>> I don't have a good news. It looks that this change is responsible for >>>>>>>> breaking boards that were rock-stable so far, like Odroid U3. I didn't >>>>>>>> manage to analyze what exactly causes the issue, but it looks that the >>>>>>>> exynos-bus devfreq driver somehow depends on the order of the nodes: >>>>>>>> >>>>>>>> (before) >>>>>>>> >>>>>>>> # dmesg | grep exynos-bus >>>>>>>> [ 6.415266] exynos-bus: new bus device registered: soc:bus-dmc >>>>>>>> (100000 KHz ~ 400000 KHz) >>>>>>>> [ 6.422717] exynos-bus: new bus device registered: soc:bus-acp >>>>>>>> (100000 KHz ~ 267000 KHz) >>>>>>>> [ 6.454323] exynos-bus: new bus device registered: soc:bus-c2c >>>>>>>> (100000 KHz ~ 400000 KHz) >>>>>>>> [ 6.489944] exynos-bus: new bus device registered: soc:bus-leftbus >>>>>>>> (100000 KHz ~ 200000 KHz) >>>>>>>> [ 6.493990] exynos-bus: new bus device registered: soc:bus-rightbus >>>>>>>> (100000 KHz ~ 200000 KHz) >>>>>>>> [ 6.494612] exynos-bus: new bus device registered: soc:bus-display >>>>>>>> (160000 KHz ~ 200000 KHz) >>>>>>>> [ 6.494932] exynos-bus: new bus device registered: soc:bus-fsys >>>>>>>> (100000 KHz ~ 134000 KHz) >>>>>>>> [ 6.495246] exynos-bus: new bus device registered: soc:bus-peri ( >>>>>>>> 50000 KHz ~ 100000 KHz) >>>>>>>> [ 6.495577] exynos-bus: new bus device registered: soc:bus-mfc >>>>>>>> (100000 KHz ~ 200000 KHz) >>>>>>>> >>>>>>>> (after) >>>>>>>> >>>>>>>> # dmesg | grep exynos-bus >>>>>>>> >>>>>>>> [ 6.082032] exynos-bus: new bus device registered: bus-dmc (100000 >>>>>>>> KHz ~ 400000 KHz) >>>>>>>> [ 6.122726] exynos-bus: new bus device registered: bus-leftbus >>>>>>>> (100000 KHz ~ 200000 KHz) >>>>>>>> [ 6.146705] exynos-bus: new bus device registered: bus-mfc (100000 >>>>>>>> KHz ~ 200000 KHz) >>>>>>>> [ 6.181632] exynos-bus: new bus device registered: bus-peri ( 50000 >>>>>>>> KHz ~ 100000 KHz) >>>>>>>> [ 6.204770] exynos-bus: new bus device registered: bus-rightbus >>>>>>>> (100000 KHz ~ 200000 KHz) >>>>>>>> [ 6.211087] exynos-bus: new bus device registered: bus-acp (100000 >>>>>>>> KHz ~ 267000 KHz) >>>>>>>> [ 6.216936] exynos-bus: new bus device registered: bus-c2c (100000 >>>>>>>> KHz ~ 400000 KHz) >>>>>>>> [ 6.225748] exynos-bus: new bus device registered: bus-display >>>>>>>> (160000 KHz ~ 200000 KHz) >>>>>>>> [ 6.242978] exynos-bus: new bus device registered: bus-fsys (100000 >>>>>>>> KHz ~ 134000 KHz) >>>>>>>> >>>>>>>> This is definitely a driver bug, but so far it worked fine, so this is a >>>>>>>> regression that need to be addressed somehow... >>>>>>> Thanks for checking, but what is exactly the bug? The devices registered >>>>>>> - just with different name. >>>>>> The bug is that the board fails to boot from time to time, freezing >>>>>> after registering PPMU counters... >>>>> My U3 with and without this patch, reports several warnings: >>>>> iommu_group_do_set_platform_dma() >>>>> exynos_iommu_domain_free() >>>>> clk_core_enable() >>>>> >>>>> and finally: >>>>> rcu: INFO: rcu_preempt detected stalls on CPUs/tasks: >>>>> >>>>> and keeps stalling. >>>>> >>>>> At least on next-20230203. Except all these (which anyway make board >>>>> unbootable) look fine around PMU and exynos-bus. >>>> I also booted few times my next/dt branch (with this patch) and no >>>> problems. How reproducible is the issue you experience? >>> IOMMU needs a fixup, that has been merged today: >>> >>> https://lore.kernel.org/all/20230123093102.12392-1-m.szyprowski@xxxxxxxxxxx/ >>> >>> I was initially convinced that this freeze is somehow related to this >>> IOMMU fixup, but it turned out that the devfreq is a source of the problems. >>> >>> The freeze happens here about 1 of 10 boots, usually with kernel >>> compiled from multi_v7_defconfig, while loading the PPMU modules. It >>> happens on your next/dt branch too. >> I was able to reproduce it easily with multi_v7. Then I commented out >> dmc bus which fixed the issue. Then I commented out acp and c2c buses >> (children/passive) which also fixed the issue. Then I uncommented >> everything and went back to next/dt - exactly the same as it was failing >> - and since then I cannot reproduce it. I triple checked, but now my >> multi_v7 on U3 on next/dt boots perfectly fine. Every time. > > This issue still happens from time to time. I quick workaround to fix it > is to add: > > MODULE_SOFTDEP("pre: exynos_ppmu"); > > to the exynos-bus driver. Is it acceptable solution? I initially thought it might be caused by deferred probe, but it happens even in successful boot. I guess we can go with this workaround because I really do not have other idea. Best regards, Krzysztof