On Thu, 14 Nov 2024 20:24:34 +0000, Saravana Kannan <saravanak@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > On Thu, Nov 14, 2024 at 11:56 AM Samuel Holland > <samuel.holland@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > > > commit 7f00be96f125 ("of: property: Add device link support for > > interrupt-parent, dmas and -gpio(s)") started adding device links for > > the interrupt-parent property. Later, commit f265f06af194 ("of: > > property: Fix fw_devlink handling of interrupts/interrupts-extended") > > added full support for parsing the interrupts and interrupts-extended > > properties, which includes looking up the node of the parent domain. > > This made the handler for the interrupt-parent property redundant. > > > > In fact, creating device links based solely on interrupt-parent is > > problematic, because it can create spurious cycles. A node may have > > this property without itself being an interrupt controller or consumer. > > For example, this property is often present in the root node or a /soc > > bus node to set the default interrupt parent for child nodes. However, > > it is incorrect for the bus to depend on the interrupt controller, as > > some of the bus's childre may not be interrupt consumers at all or may > > have a different interrupt parent. > > > > Resolving these spurious dependency cycles can cause an incorrect probe > > order for interrupt controller drivers. This was observed on a RISC-V > > system with both an APLIC and IMSIC under /soc, where interrupt-parent > > in /soc points to the APLIC, and the APLIC msi-parent points to the > > IMSIC. fw_devlink found three dependency cycles and attempted to probe > > the APLIC before the IMSIC. After applying this patch, there were no > > dependency cycles and the probe order was correct. > > Rob/Marc, > > If the claim about the interrupt parent interpretation is correct > across the board, I'm ok with this patch. I agree with Samuel's analysis that "interrupt-parent" is not always relevant to unsuspecting devices, given that it is often inherited from a bus-wide or system-wide parent node. Collectively, "interrupts" (which implicitly uses "interrupt-parent"), "interrupt-extended" and "interrupt-map" should provide enough information to ensure correct dependency tracking. This is a notable departure from "msi-parent", which itself doesn't require any extra specifier, and cannot be ignored here (I note the absence of "msi-map" tracking though). > I remember the RISC-V DT for interrupts being a mess. So, want to make I'm afraid other architectures are not any better. RISC-V only has the dubious advantage of coming up with backward designs, which doesn't help. > sure you agree with these claims before I Ack it. This needs testing, but looks sane from my PoV (though it is early and I need single coffee)... FWIW: Acked-by: Marc Zyngier <maz@xxxxxxxxxx> M. -- Without deviation from the norm, progress is not possible.