On Mon, 22 May 2017 16:06:36 +0200 Rasmus Villemoes <rasmus.villemoes@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: > If a watchdog driver tells the framework that the device is running, > the framework takes care of feeding the watchdog until userspace opens > the device. If the userspace application which is supposed to do that > never comes up properly, the watchdog is fed indefinitely by the > kernel. This can be especially problematic for embedded devices. > > These patches allow one to set a maximum time for which the kernel > will feed the watchdog, thus ensuring that either userspace has come > up, or the board gets reset. This allows fallback logic in the > bootloader to attempt some recovery (for example, if an automatic > update is in progress, it could roll back to the previous version). This makes sense except for being a CONFIG_ option not a boot parameter. If it's a boot parameter then the same kernel works for multiple systems and is general. If it's compile time then you have to build a custom kernel. For some embedded stuff that might not matter (although I bet they'd prefer it command line/device tree too) but for something like an x86 platform where you are deploying a standard vendor supplied kernel it's bad to do it that way IMHO. In other words I think you should drop patch 3 but the rest is good. Alan -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-doc" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html