Den 07.09.2022 18.44, skrev Noralf Trønnes: > > > Den 07.09.2022 12.36, skrev Stefan Wahren: >> Hi Maxime, >> >> Am 05.09.22 um 16:57 schrieb Maxime Ripard: >>> On Fri, Sep 02, 2022 at 01:28:16PM +0200, Noralf Trønnes wrote: >>>> >>>> Den 01.09.2022 21.35, skrev Noralf Trønnes: >>>>> >>>>> I have finally found a workaround for my kernel hangs. >>>>> >>>>> Dom had a look at my kernel and found that the VideoCore was fine, and >>>>> he said this: >>>>> >>>>>> That suggests cause of lockup was on arm side rather than VC side. >>>>>> >>>>>> But it's hard to diagnose further. Once you've had a peripheral not >>>>>> respond, the AXI bus locks up and no further operations are possible. >>>>>> Usual causes of this are required clocks being stopped or domains >>>>>> disabled and then trying to access the hardware. >>>>>> >>>>> So when I got this on my 64-bit build: >>>>> >>>>> [ 166.702171] SError Interrupt on CPU1, code 0x00000000bf000002 -- >>>>> SError >>>>> [ 166.702187] CPU: 1 PID: 8 Comm: kworker/u8:0 Tainted: G W >>>>> 5.19.0-rc6-00096-gba7973977976-dirty #1 >>>>> [ 166.702200] Hardware name: Raspberry Pi 4 Model B Rev 1.1 (DT) >>>>> [ 166.702206] Workqueue: events_freezable_power_ >>>>> thermal_zone_device_check >>>>> [ 166.702231] pstate: 200000c5 (nzCv daIF -PAN -UAO -TCO -DIT -SSBS >>>>> BTYPE=--) >>>>> [ 166.702242] pc : regmap_mmio_read32le+0x10/0x28 >>>>> [ 166.702261] lr : regmap_mmio_read+0x44/0x70 >>>>> ... >>>>> [ 166.702606] bcm2711_get_temp+0x58/0xb0 [bcm2711_thermal] >>>>> >>>>> I wondered if that reg read was stalled due to a clock being stopped. >>>>> >>>>> Lo and behold, disabling runtime pm and keeping the vec clock running >>>>> all the time fixed it[1]. >>>>> >>>>> I don't know what the problem is, but at least I can now test this >>>>> patchset. >>>>> >>>>> [1] https://gist.github.com/notro/23b984e7fa05cfbda2db50a421cac065 >>>>> >>>> It turns out I didn't have to disable runtime pm: >>>> https://gist.github.com/notro/0adcfcb12460b54e54458afe11dc8ea2 >>> If the bcm2711_thermal IP needs that clock to be enabled, it should grab >>> a reference itself, but it looks like even the device tree binding >>> doesn't ask for one. >> The missing clock in the device tree binding is expected, because >> despite of the code there is not much information about the BCM2711 >> clock tree. But i'm skeptical that the AVS IP actually needs the VEC >> clock, i think it's more likely that the VEC clock parent is changed and >> that cause this issue. I could take care of the bcm2711 binding & driver >> if i know which clock is really necessary. > > Seems you're right, keeping the parent always enabled is enough: > > clk_prepare_enable(clk_get_parent(vec->clock)); // pllc_per > > I tried enabling just the grandparent clock as well, but that didn't help. > > Without the clock hack it seems the hang occurs when switching between > NTSC and PAL, at most I've been able to do that 4-5 times before it hangs. > > For a while it looked like fbdev/fbcon had a play in this, but then I > realised that it just gave me a NTSC mode to start from and to go back > to when qutting modetest. > I've looked some more into this problem and I see that downstream is using a firmware clock for vec: clk: Move vec clock to clk-raspberrypi https://github.com/raspberrypi/linux/pull/4639 If I do the same my problem goes away. It's interesting to note that on downstream 5.10.103-v7l+ #1530, pllc_per is enabled even if tvout is not enabled: $ sudo cat /sys/kernel/debug/clk/pllc_per/regdump cm = 0x00000000 a2w = 0x00000004 (disable bit(8) is not set) It's when mainline vc4_vec disables this vec parent clock that the crash occurs. Sidenote: Another downstream fw clock change with a vec reference[1]: Another issue not related to the clock crash problem: I assumed that unloading the vc4 module would release the clocks, but this didn't happen. When I looked at it I remembered that there's a catch in the DRM unplug machinery when it comes to unloading a driver and the DRM disable hooks. static void vc4_drm_unbind(struct device *dev) { struct drm_device *drm = dev_get_drvdata(dev); drm_dev_unplug(drm); drm_atomic_helper_shutdown(drm); } Here the drm_device is first marked as unplugged and then the pipeline is disabled. Since vc4_vec_encoder_disable() is protected by drm_dev_enter() the VEC is not disabled, clocks are not released and PM is left on. In the drivers that I have written where the hardware is not expected to have gone away on device unbind (SPI), I've just left out the drm_dev_enter() check in the disable hook. Noralf. [1] https://github.com/raspberrypi/linux/pull/4706