On Thu, Aug 08, 2024 at 05:59:28PM +0800, Chen-Yu Tsai wrote: > Some devices are designed and manufactured with some components having > multiple drop-in replacement options. These components are often > connected to the mainboard via ribbon cables, having the same signals > and pin assignments across all options. These may include the display > panel and touchscreen on laptops and tablets, and the trackpad on > laptops. Sometimes which component option is used in a particular device > can be detected by some firmware provided identifier, other times that > information is not available, and the kernel has to try to probe each > device. > > This change attempts to make the "probe each device" case cleaner. The > current approach is to have all options added and enabled in the device > tree. The kernel would then bind each device and run each driver's probe > function. This works, but has been broken before due to the introduction > of asynchronous probing, causing multiple instances requesting "shared" > resources, such as pinmuxes, GPIO pins, interrupt lines, at the same > time, with only one instance succeeding. Work arounds for these include > moving the pinmux to the parent I2C controller, using GPIO hogs or > pinmux settings to keep the GPIO pins in some fixed configuration, and > requesting the interrupt line very late. Such configurations can be seen > on the MT8183 Krane Chromebook tablets, and the Qualcomm sc8280xp-based > Lenovo Thinkpad 13S. > > Instead of this delicate dance between drivers and device tree quirks, > this change introduces a simple I2C component prober. For any given > class of devices on the same I2C bus, it will go through all of them, > doing a simple I2C read transfer and see which one of them responds. > It will then enable the device that responds. > > This requires some minor modifications in the existing device tree. > The status for all the device nodes for the component options must be > set to "failed-needs-probe". This makes it clear that some mechanism is > needed to enable one of them, and also prevents the prober and device > drivers running at the same time. ... > + * Copyright (c) 2023 Google LLC At bare minimum we are in 2024 now. ... > +#include <linux/array_size.h> > +#include <linux/i2c.h> > +#include <linux/module.h> > +#include <linux/of.h> Why? > +#include <linux/platform_device.h> ... > + for (size_t i = 0; i < ARRAY_SIZE(hw_prober_platforms); i++) { > + if (!of_machine_is_compatible(hw_prober_platforms[i].compatible)) > + continue; > + int ret; I didn't know we allow this kind of definition mix besides for-loop and __free()... Can you point me out where this style change was discussed? > + ret = hw_prober_platforms[i].prober(&pdev->dev, hw_prober_platforms[i].data); > + /* Ignore unrecoverable errors and keep going through other probers */ > + if (ret == -EPROBE_DEFER) > + return ret; > + } ... > +static void chromeos_of_hw_prober_driver_exit(void) > +{ > + if (!chromeos_of_hw_prober_pdev) > + return; First of all, this is dup for the next call, second, when may this conditional be true? > + platform_device_unregister(chromeos_of_hw_prober_pdev); > + platform_driver_unregister(&chromeos_of_hw_prober_driver); > +} > +module_exit(chromeos_of_hw_prober_driver_exit); -- With Best Regards, Andy Shevchenko