On 06/09/2014 01:29 PM, Lars-Peter Clausen wrote: > On 06/09/2014 01:18 AM, Ben Dooks wrote: >> On Fri, May 30, 2014 at 08:16:59PM +0200, Lars-Peter Clausen wrote: >>> On 05/30/2014 07:33 PM, David Daney wrote: >>>> On 05/30/2014 04:39 AM, Geert Uytterhoeven wrote: >>>>> On Fri, May 30, 2014 at 1:30 PM, abdoulaye berthe <berthe.ab@xxxxxxxxx> >>>>> wrote: >>>>>> --- a/drivers/gpio/gpiolib.c >>>>>> +++ b/drivers/gpio/gpiolib.c >>>>>> @@ -1263,10 +1263,9 @@ static void gpiochip_irqchip_remove(struct >>>>>> gpio_chip *gpiochip); >>>>>> * >>>>>> * A gpio_chip with any GPIOs still requested may not be removed. >>>>>> */ >>>>>> -int gpiochip_remove(struct gpio_chip *chip) >>>>>> +void gpiochip_remove(struct gpio_chip *chip) >>>>>> { >>>>>> unsigned long flags; >>>>>> - int status = 0; >>>>>> unsigned id; >>>>>> >>>>>> acpi_gpiochip_remove(chip); >>>>>> @@ -1278,24 +1277,15 @@ int gpiochip_remove(struct gpio_chip *chip) >>>>>> of_gpiochip_remove(chip); >>>>>> >>>>>> for (id = 0; id < chip->ngpio; id++) { >>>>>> - if (test_bit(FLAG_REQUESTED, &chip->desc[id].flags)) { >>>>>> - status = -EBUSY; >>>>>> - break; >>>>>> - } >>>>>> - } >>>>>> - if (status == 0) { >>>>>> - for (id = 0; id < chip->ngpio; id++) >>>>>> - chip->desc[id].chip = NULL; >>>>>> - >>>>>> - list_del(&chip->list); >>>>>> + if (test_bit(FLAG_REQUESTED, &chip->desc[id].flags)) >>>>>> + panic("gpio: removing gpiochip with gpios still >>>>>> requested\n"); >>>>> >>>>> panic? >>>> >>>> NACK to the patch for this reason. The strongest thing you should do here >>>> is WARN. >>>> >>>> That said, I am not sure why we need this whole patch set in the first place. >>> >>> Well, what currently happens when you remove a device that is a >>> provider of a gpio_chip which is still in use, is that the kernel >>> crashes. Probably with a rather cryptic error message. So this patch >>> doesn't really change the behavior, but makes it more explicit what >>> is actually wrong. And even if you replace the panic() by a WARN() >>> it will again just crash slightly later. >>> >>> This is a design flaw in the GPIO subsystem that needs to be fixed. >> >> Surely then the best way is to error out to the module unload and >> stop the driver being unloaded? >> > > You can't error out on module unload, although that's not really relevant > here. gpiochip_remove() is typically called when the device that registered > the GPIO chip is unbound. And despite some remove() callbacks having a > return type of int you can not abort the removal of a device. It is a design flaw in many subsystems having providers and consumers, not only GPIO. The same situation is with clock providers, regulators, phys, drm_panels, ..., at least it was such last time I have tested it. The problem is that many frameworks assumes that lifetime of provider is always bigger than lifetime of its consumers, and this is wrong assumption - usually it is not possible to prevent unbinding driver from device, so if the device is a provider there is no way to inform consumers about his removal. Some solution for such problems is to use some kind of availability callbacks for requesting resources (gpios, clocks, regulators,...) instead of simple 'getters' (clk_get, gpiod_get). Callbacks should guarantee that the resource is always valid between callback reporting its availability and callback reporting its removal. Such approach seems to be complicated at the first sight but it should allow to make the code safe and as a bonus it will allow to avoid deferred probing. Btw I have send already RFC for such framework [1]. [1]: https://lkml.org/lkml/2014/4/30/345 Regards Andrzej > > - Lars > -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-gpio" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html