On Tue, Aug 20, 2024 at 09:52:40AM +0200, Philipp Stanner wrote: > On Mon, 2024-08-19 at 21:28 +0300, Andy Shevchenko wrote: > > On Mon, Aug 19, 2024 at 06:51:47PM +0200, Philipp Stanner wrote: ... > > loongson_dwmac_probe() > > > > > + memset(&res, 0, sizeof(res)); > > > + res.addr = pcim_iomap_region(pdev, 0, pci_name(pdev)); > > > + if (IS_ERR(res.addr)) { > > > + ret = PTR_ERR(res.addr); > > > + goto err_disable_device; > > > > It seems your series reveals issues in the error paths of .probe():s > > in many drivers... > > > > If we use pcim variant to enable device, why do we need to explicitly > > disable it? > > No. Can you elaborate? No issues being revealed, or no need to disable it explicitly, or...? > > > } ... > > loongson_dwmac_remove() > > > > > pci_disable_msi(pdev); > > > pci_disable_device(pdev); > > > > Not sure why we need these either... > > It's complicated. > > The code uses pciM_enable_device(), but here in remove > pci_disable_device(). > > pcim_enable_device() sets up a disable callback which only calls > pci_disable_device() if pcim_pin_device() has not been called. > > This code doesn't seem to call pcim_pin_device(), so I think > pci_disable_device() could be removed. > > > I definitely would not feel confident touching pci_disable_msi(), > though. The AFAIK biggest problem remaining in PCI devres is that the > MSI code base implicitly calls into devres, see here [1] But isn't it a busyness of PCI core to call pci_disable_msi() at the right moment? Okay, I admit that there might be devices that require a special workflow WRT MSI, is this the case here? > [1] https://lore.kernel.org/all/ee44ea7ac760e73edad3f20b30b4d2fff66c1a85.camel@xxxxxxxxxx/ -- With Best Regards, Andy Shevchenko