On Tue, Mar 25, 2014 at 08:05:30PM +1000, Dave Airlie wrote: > On Tue, Mar 25, 2014 at 6:24 PM, Daniel Vetter <daniel@xxxxxxxx> wrote: > > On Tue, Mar 25, 2014 at 6:53 AM, Dave Airlie <airlied@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: > >> So with runtime pm on nouveau, if the card gets powered down, and then > >> you access a connector via sysfs, > >> > >> drm_sysfs.c:status_show locks the connector and calls into the driver, > >> the driver then does a runtime_get_sync, which causes resume to happen > >> which causes modesetting to reset the mode, which tries to take all > >> the locks, and it all deadlocks in a pile, > >> > >> Ideas to fix this, move the runtime_get_sync into the drm_sysfs code, > >> or allow the drivers to provide their own status show functions, > >> moving the runtime get into the sysfs code probably involves having > >> conditionals for device that support runtime PM at all, otherwise who > >> knows what might happen, > > > > You need special runtime suspend/resume functions so that sysfs access > > doesn't try to resurrect the world by accident (and so goes into the > > modeset code when not needed). i915 runtime PM does that and a lot > > more (we can runtime suspend even when the device is open, debugfs, > > sysfs, i2c and any other probing and poking just wake up the minimal > > parts of the device and state and so on ...). If you look at our > > runtime_suspend/resum functions there's very little we actually do ... > > Our runtime pm is completely different than i915, since the chip is > completely off, with a hard power switch which the GPU isn't aware off > so we have to switch it back on again and post it do anything, even > probe a connector, and if you post it you may as well reset the mode, > granted maybe we don't need to care about the modeset I might play a > bit tomorrow with just removing the modeset from the runtime resume > path. Imo if you runtime suspend while there's something being displayed users will get angry ;-) So there shouldn't be any need to restore modeset state really, hence why you need to split system suspend/resume from runtime suspend resume. And even though i915 doesn't forget quite everything we also need to put pretty much all the hw state back in upon system resume (i.e. pretty much all the registers are gone), so fundametally I don't see that big a difference. Of course since this is integrated gfx we don't have to reinit the memory controller and stuff like that, since that's outside of the gfx. -Daniel -- Daniel Vetter Software Engineer, Intel Corporation +41 (0) 79 365 57 48 - http://blog.ffwll.ch _______________________________________________ dri-devel mailing list dri-devel@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx http://lists.freedesktop.org/mailman/listinfo/dri-devel