On Tue, May 16, 2023 at 10:03:45PM +0300, Andy Shevchenko wrote: > On Mon, May 15, 2023 at 1:13 PM Charles Keepax > <ckeepax@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > On Fri, May 12, 2023 at 10:19:14PM +0300, andy.shevchenko@xxxxxxxxx wrote: > > > Fri, May 12, 2023 at 01:28:36PM +0100, Charles Keepax kirjoitti: > > > > + if (!of_property_read_bool(dev_of_node(cs42l43->dev), "gpio-ranges")) { > > > > + ret = gpiochip_add_pin_range(&priv->gpio_chip, priv->gpio_chip.label, > > > > + 0, 0, CS42L43_NUM_GPIOS); > > > > + if (ret) { > > > > + dev_err(priv->dev, "Failed to add GPIO pin range: %d\n", ret); > > > > + goto err_pm; > > > > + } > > > > + } > > > > > > Besides the fact that we have a callback for this, why GPIO library can't > > > handle this for you already? > > > > Apologies but I am not quite sure I follow you, in the device > > tree case this will be handled by the GPIO library. But for ACPI > > this information does not exist so has to be called manually, the > > library does not necessarily know which values to call with, > > although admittedly our case is trivial but not all are. > > Why can't the firmware provide this information? _DSD() is a part of > ACPI v5.1 IIRC. > I am very very far from confident we can guarantee that will be present in the ACPI. The ACPI is typically made for and by the Windows side. > Although it might require moving some code from gpiolib-of.c to > gpiolib.c with replacing OF APIs with agnostic ones. > I really think if we want to start doing things that way on ACPI platforms someone with a little more clout than us needs to start doing it first. If Intel or someone was doing it that way it might give us a little more levelage to push it as being the "correct" way to do it. I will switch to the callback, but really don't think we can rely on this being in DSD yet. > > > > > +static int cs42l43_pin_remove(struct platform_device *pdev) > > > > +{ > > > > + pm_runtime_disable(&pdev->dev); > > > > > > This is simply wrong order because it's a mix of non-devm_*() followed by > > > devm_*() calls in the probe. > > > > > > > I had missed there are now devm_pm_runtime calls, I will switch > > to that. But I would like to understand the wrong order, remove > > will be called before the devm bits are destroyed and it seems > > reasonable to disable the pm_runtime before destroying the > > pinctrl device. What exactly would run in the wrong order here? > > At the ->remove() stage after this call an IRQ can be fired (or on SMP > systems any other APIs can be called), for example. So, would it be a > problem to service it with PM disabled? > > But in any case the shuffling ordering like this is prone to subtle > bugs. I prefer to have strict ordering if there is nothing preventing > from doing that way. Yeah happy enough to use devm_ here, just didn't know it existed and wanted to better understand your concerns as I was having difficulty seeing the issue. Thanks, Charles