Re: [PATCH v5 5/6] drm/log: Implement suspend/resume

[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]

 



On 24/10/2024 16:34, Petr Mladek wrote:
On Wed 2024-10-23 14:00:13, Jocelyn Falempe wrote:
The console is already suspended in printk.c.

Does this mean that drm_log_client_suspend() is called
after suspend_console(), please?

To be honest, I wasn't able to tell which one is called first, and if the order is enforced (I didn't check if drivers can be suspended in parallel, or if it's all sequential)..

I then checked if it's possible to suspend the console, but didn't found an easy API to do so, so I went with this lazy patch, just ensuring we're not writing to a suspended graphic driver.


By other words, does it mean that "dlog->suspended == true" is set
only when CON_SUSPENDED is already set in the related con->flags?
8
Just make sure we don't write to the framebuffer while the graphic
driver is suspended.
It may lose a few messages between graphic suspend and console
suspend.

The messages should not get lost when the console is properly
suspended by suspend_console(), set CON_SUSPENDED.

Or maybe, I do not understand it correctly. Maybe you want to say
that it should work correctly even without this patch. And this
patch creates just a safeguard to make sure that nothing wrong
happens even when suspend_console() was not called from some
reasons.

I mean that with this patch if the console is suspended after the graphic driver, then the message between the suspend of the graphic driver and the suspend of the console won't be drawn. I don't see that as a big problem, if you debug suspend/resume with drm_log, and the screen goes blank, you won't see much anyway. And using dmesg when the system is resumed, would have all the messages.

Without this patch, it may crash if the framebuffer is no more accessible, and drm_log tries to draw a new line on it.


Note: I tried to check the order by reading the code. But
       drm_log_client_suspend() was called via too many layers.
       And I was not able to find where exactly it was called,
       for example, from hibernate() in kernel/power/hibernate.c


--- a/drivers/gpu/drm/drm_log.c
+++ b/drivers/gpu/drm/drm_log.c
@@ -310,10 +311,32 @@ static int drm_log_client_hotplug(struct drm_client_dev *client)
  	return 0;
  }
+static int drm_log_client_suspend(struct drm_client_dev *client, bool _console_lock)
+{
+	struct drm_log *dlog = client_to_drm_log(client);
+
+	mutex_lock(&dlog->lock);
+	dlog->suspended = true;
+	mutex_unlock(&dlog->lock);

It might also be possible to explicitly set the CON_SUSPENDED flag
here to be always on the safe side. We could create variant of
suspend_console() just for one console. Something like:

void suspend_one_console(struct console *con)
{
	struct console *con;

	if (!console_suspend_enabled)
		return;

	pr_info("Suspending console(%s) (use no_console_suspend to debug)\n");
	pr_flush(1000, true);

	console_list_lock();
	if (con && console_is_registered_locked(con))
		console_srcu_write_flags(con, con->flags | CON_SUSPENDED);
	console_list_unlock();

	/*
	 * Ensure that all SRCU list walks have completed. All printing
	 * contexts must be able to see that they are suspended so that it
	 * is guaranteed that all printing has stopped when this function
	 * completes.
	 */
	synchronize_srcu(&console_srcu);
}

and call here:

	suspend_one_console(dlog->con);


But this is not needed when the console is already supposed to be
disabled here. If this is the case then it might be better
to just check and warn when it does not happen. Something like:

void assert_console_suspended(struct console *con)
{
	int cookie;

	cookie = console_srcu_read_lock();

	/* Do not care about unregistered console */
	if (!con || hlist_unhashed_lockless(&con->node))
		goto out;

	if (WARN_ON_ONCE(!(console_srcu_read_flags(con) & CON_SUSPENDED)))
		pr_flush(1000, true);
out:
	console_srcu_read_unlock(cookie);
}

+	return 0;
+}



Thanks for this two suggestions, this is really what I was looking for.
I will run some tests on real hardware, to see which one is suspended first.

Best regards,

--

Jocelyn

Best Regards,
Petr

PS: I have vacation the following week and might not be able to
     follow the discussion before I am back.





[Index of Archives]     [Linux DRI Users]     [Linux Intel Graphics]     [Linux USB Devel]     [Video for Linux]     [Linux Audio Users]     [Yosemite News]     [Linux Kernel]     [Linux SCSI]     [XFree86]     [Linux USB Devel]     [Video for Linux]     [Linux Audio Users]     [Linux Kernel]     [Linux SCSI]     [XFree86]
  Powered by Linux