Re: [PATCH v4 3/5] remoteproc: Pass type of shutdown to subdev remove

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On 12/06/2017 10:53 PM, Bjorn Andersson wrote:
> On Wed 06 Dec 00:55 PST 2017, Arnaud Pouliquen wrote:
> 
>> Hello,
>>
>> I saw your new version but i 'm answering to this one to continue
>> discussion.
>>
> 
> That's fine.
> 
>> On 12/05/2017 06:17 PM, Bjorn Andersson wrote:
>>> On Tue 05 Dec 02:54 PST 2017, Arnaud Pouliquen wrote:
>>>> On 12/05/2017 07:46 AM, Bjorn Andersson wrote:
>>>>> On Fri 01 Dec 06:50 PST 2017, Arnaud Pouliquen wrote:
>>>>>>> diff --git a/include/linux/remoteproc.h b/include/linux/remoteproc.h
>>>>>>> index 44e630eb3d94..20a9467744ea 100644
>>>>>>> --- a/include/linux/remoteproc.h
>>>>>>> +++ b/include/linux/remoteproc.h
>>>>>>> @@ -456,7 +456,7 @@ struct rproc_subdev {
>>>>>>>  	struct list_head node;
>>>>>>>  
>>>>>>>  	int (*probe)(struct rproc_subdev *subdev);
>>>>>>> -	void (*remove)(struct rproc_subdev *subdev);
>>>>>>> +	void (*remove)(struct rproc_subdev *subdev, bool graceful);
>>>>>> What about adding a new ops instead of a parameter, like a recovery
>>>>>> callback?
>>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>> I think that for symmetry purposes it should be probe/remove in both
>>>>> code paths. A possible alternative to the proposal would be to introduce
>>>>> an operation "request_shutdown()" the would be called in the proposed
>>>>> graceful code path.
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>> However, in the Qualcomm SMD and GLINK (conceptually equivalent to
>>>>> virtio-rpmsg) it is possible to open and close communication channels
>>>>> and it's conceivable to see that the graceful case would close all
>>>>> channels cleanly while the non-graceful case would just remove the rpmsg
>>>>> devices (and leave the channel states/memory as is).
>>>>>
>>>>> In this case a "request_shutdown()" would complicate things, compared to
>>>>> the boolean.
>>>>>
>>>> I would be more for a specific ops that inform sub-dev on a crash. This
>>>> would allow sub-dev to perform specific action (for instance dump) and
>>>> store crash information, then on remove, sub_dev would perform specific
>>>> action.
>>>
>>> There is a separate discussion (although dormant) on how to gather core
>>> dumps, which should cover these cases.
>>>
>>>> This could be something like "trigger_recovery" that is propagated to
>>>> the sub-dev.
>>>>
>>>
>>> Right, this step does make sense, but is the opposite of what I need -
>>> i.e. a means to trigger a clean shutdown.
>> Could you clarify this point? i do not see my proposal as the opposite.
>> In your proposal:
>> - rproc_trigger_recovery: graceful is set to false
>> - rproc_shutdown: Graceful is set to true
>>
> 
> Correct
> 
>> My proposal is to call an new ops (if defined) before the stop in
>> rproc_trigger_recovery. If you set a local variable in Qualcomm subdev
>> drivers this should do the job for your need.
>>
> 
> In all use cases that comes to mind the gracefulness makes one step of
> the teardown operation kick in/be optional, it's not a separate
> operation. I don't see the benefit of enforcing the subdev to keep this
> state.
> 
>> I tried to have a look in Qualcomm part to understand implementation.
>> but seems that you just add the parameter for time being.
>>
> 
> The following patch, adding sysmon, make use of this. But I have yet to
> post patches that affects the SMD and GLINK implementations.
> 
>> I think that main point that bother me here, is the that the "graceful"
>> mode should be the normal mode. And in your implementation this look
>> like the exception mode.
> 
> I agree, I consider the recovery path to be the exception, but I'm not
> seeing the necessity of making the "true" state of this parameter mean
> "yes we have an exception".
> 
> Regardless of the value here, the remove() function's purpose is to
> clean up resources/state. But in the case of a graceful shutdown (i.e.
> not recovery path) the subdevices can be expected to tear things down in
> a fashion that permits the remote side to act, so if anything this
> "true" would imply that this extra steps should be taken.
> 
>> Perhaps more a feeling than anything else...but if you decide to keep
>> argument i would propose to inverse logic using something like
>> "rproc_crashed"  instead of "graceful".
>>
> 
> The difference between "this is a graceful shutdown, let's inform the
> remote" and "this is not a crash, let's inform the remote". The prior
> sounds much more to the point in my view.

On the other hand, i consider "graceful" as a normal mode that is
implemented in kernel. By informing sub-dev that "this is a graceful
shutdown", you just precise a behavior that is already implemented by
default.
And in case of recovery, you inform sub-dev that "this is not a graceful
shutdown". What does it means "this is not a graceful shutdown"?...This
is confusing, from my point of view.

for this reason, I still don't like the "graceful" wording too much, but
this is a personal feeling, not a strong argument. :)
So, if you are not convince by my last argument and nobody else
comments, consider it as OK for me.

> 
>>>
>>>> That would sound more flexible from my point of view.
>>>>
>>>
>>> At this point I see this flexibility as unnecessary complexity, if such
>>> need show up (beyond the core dump gathering) we should bring this up
>>> again.
>>
>> I let you decide what is the best solution.
>> My concerns is to be sure that your solution is enough generic and not
>> too Qualcomm platform oriented.
> 
> That's a fair concern. I'm very interested in finding more complex use
> cases that requires this type of logic, to see if this is generic
> enough.
> 
> Note that the discussions that we've had related to e.g. clocks that
> should be on during the life of the remote would not fit into the
> current subdev life cycle anyways, so this either needs to be
> complemented or extended.
> 
Today the only other use case, i would have in mind (except dump) is the
management of a "hot" restart on a crash... but no concrete example.

>> As you mentioned in OpenAMP meeting it is quite difficult to come back
>> on an implementation , especially if it impacts the API.
>>
> 
> No, what I said is that it's impossible to go back once we have changed
> the file format, the interface towards the remote or the interface
> towards user space. All it takes to change an interface within the
> kernel is a single patch.
> 
Thanks for this clarification.

Regards,
Arnaud




> Regards,
> Bjorn
> 
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