On Tue, Jan 20, 2015 at 3:37 PM, Lyra Zhang <zhang.lyra@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: > Hi, Rob > > I still have a question to be conform, specific describes below: > > On Mon, Jan 19, 2015 at 10:11 PM, Rob Herring <robherring2@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: >> On Mon, Jan 19, 2015 at 3:55 AM, Lyra Zhang <zhang.lyra@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: >>> On Sat, Jan 17, 2015 at 12:41 AM, Rob Herring <robherring2@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: >>>> On Fri, Jan 16, 2015 at 4:00 AM, Chunyan Zhang >>>> <chunyan.zhang@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: >>>>> Add a full sc9836-uart driver for SC9836 SoC which is based on the >>>>> spreadtrum sharkl64 platform. >>>>> This driver also support earlycon. >>>>> This patch also replaced the spaces between the macros and their >>>>> values with the tabs in serial_core.h >> >> [...] >> >>>>> +static int __init sprd_serial_init(void) >>>>> +{ >>>>> + int ret = 0; >>>>> + >>>>> + ret = uart_register_driver(&sprd_uart_driver); >>>> >>>> This can be done in probe now. Then you can use module_platform_driver(). >>>> >>> >>> Question: >>> 1. there are 4 uart ports configured in dt for sprd_serial, so probe >>> will be called 4 times, but uart_register_driver only needs to be >>> called one time, so can we use uart_driver.state to check if >>> uart_register_driver has already been called ? >> >> Yes. >> >>> 2. if I use module_platform_driver() instead of >>> module_init(sprd_serial_init) and module_exit(sprd_serial_exit) , I >>> must move uart_unregister_driver() which is now processed in >>> sprd_serial_exit() to sprd_remove(), there is a similar problem with >>> probe(), sprd_remove() will also be called 4 times, and actually it >>> should be called only one time. How can we deal with this case? >> >> Look at pl01x or Samsung UART drivers which have done this conversion. > > Samsung UART does use module_platform_driver, but pl010/pl011 doesn't. > In the Samsung UART driver, uart_unregister_driver is processed in > remove(), like below: > > static int s3c24xx_serial_remove(struct platform_device *dev) > { > struct uart_port *port = s3c24xx_dev_to_port(&dev->dev); > > if (port) { > s3c24xx_serial_cpufreq_deregister(to_ourport(port)); > uart_remove_one_port(&s3c24xx_uart_drv, port); > } > > uart_unregister_driver(&s3c24xx_uart_drv); > } > > if this serial has more than one ports, uart_unregister_driver() must > be called multiple times when the device need to be removed. > I think there may be a problem because that uart_unregister_driver() > will do kfree(drv->state) every time when it's called. I think it is no appropriate to call uart_unregister_driver() at first port removing. The drv->state buffer was shared with all uart ports. If there are some cases that only 1 port is needed to be removed, that will destroy all others, isn't it? Regards, Orson > > Thanks, > Chunyan > >> >>> 3. for the second question, we can check the platform_device->id, if >>> it is equal to the index of last port (e.g. 4 for this case), then >>> uart_unregister_driver() can be called. Does it work correctly? since >>> for this case, we must keep the order of releasing ports. >> >> The id will not be the line index in the DT case. I don't think you >> can guarantee the order either. >> >> It would be better to make uart_{un}register_driver deal with being >> called multiple times so drivers don't have to deal with getting this >> correct. I'm not sure if that is feasible though. >> >> Rob -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-api" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html