On Fri, Sep 2, 2016 at 7:09 AM, Heikki Krogerus <heikki.krogerus@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > Hi, > > On Wed, Aug 31, 2016 at 05:40:17PM -0700, Stephen Boyd wrote: >> @@ -174,14 +219,37 @@ static int ulpi_register(struct device *dev, struct ulpi *ulpi) >> ulpi->id.product = ulpi_read(ulpi, ULPI_PRODUCT_ID_LOW); >> ulpi->id.product |= ulpi_read(ulpi, ULPI_PRODUCT_ID_HIGH) << 8; >> >> + return 0; >> +} >> + >> +static int ulpi_register(struct device *dev, struct ulpi *ulpi) >> +{ >> + int ret; >> + >> ulpi->dev.parent = dev; >> ulpi->dev.bus = &ulpi_bus; >> ulpi->dev.type = &ulpi_dev_type; >> dev_set_name(&ulpi->dev, "%s.ulpi", dev_name(dev)); >> >> + if (IS_ENABLED(CONFIG_OF)) { > > I don't think you need to check that in this case. > >> + ret = ulpi_of_register(ulpi); >> + if (ret) >> + return ret; >> + } >> + >> ACPI_COMPANION_SET(&ulpi->dev, ACPI_COMPANION(dev)); > > ACPI_COMPANION_SET will overwrite the primary fwnode unconditionally, > so just to play it safe, do this before you call ulpi_of_register(). Ok. > >> - request_module("ulpi:v%04xp%04x", ulpi->id.vendor, ulpi->id.product); >> + ret = ulpi_read_id(ulpi); >> + /* >> + * Ignore failure in case of DT node because the device may >> + * not be powered up yet but we can still match by compatible >> + */ >> + if (ret && !ulpi->dev.of_node) >> + return ret; >> + >> + if (of_device_request_module(&ulpi->dev)) >> + request_module("ulpi:v%04xp%04x", ulpi->id.vendor, >> + ulpi->id.product); > > I don't think this works in all cases. If of_device_request_module() > fails and we don't have the id.vendor/product set, we should not > register the device. It also looks a bit messy. > > How about just using of_device_request_module() call as fallback in > ulpi_read_id() and moving also request_module() call there: Sure I'll fold it in and test. Should we "goto err" if we can't read the scratch register though? I would think that's a "real" failure and we shouldn't try to support DT in that case. -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-arm-msm" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html