On Mon, Oct 25, 2021 at 08:15:41AM +0200, Greg Kroah-Hartman wrote: > On Mon, Oct 25, 2021 at 12:38:08AM -0500, Frank Rowand wrote: > > On 10/23/21 3:56 AM, Greg Kroah-Hartman wrote: > We have the bind/unbind ability today, from userspace, that can control > this. Why not just have Linux grab the device when it boots, and then > when userspace wants to "give the device up", it writes to "unbind" in > sysfs, and then when all is done, it writes to the "bind" file and then > Linux takes back over. > > Unless for some reason Linux should _not_ grab the device when booting, > then things get messier, as we have seen in this thread. This is probably more typical on a BMC than atypical. The systems often require the BMC (running Linux) to be able to reboot independently from the managed host (running anything). In the example Zev gave, the BMC rebooting would rip away the BIOS chip from the running host. The BMC almost always needs to come up in a "I don't know what could possibly be going on in the system" state and re-discover where the system was left off. -- Patrick Williams
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