On Wed, Oct 27, 2021 at 12:24:07PM +0200, Emil Renner Berthing wrote: > On Wed, 27 Oct 2021 at 02:54, Stephen Boyd <sboyd@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > Quoting Emil Renner Berthing (2021-10-26 15:35:36) > > > On Tue, 26 Oct 2021 at 22:20, Stephen Boyd <sboyd@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > > > Quoting Emil Renner Berthing (2021-10-21 10:42:13) ... > > > > > +static int __init clk_starfive_jh7100_probe(struct platform_device *pdev) > > > > > > > > Drop __init as this can be called after kernel init is over. > > > > > > Oh interesting, I'd like to know when that can happen. The comment for > > > the builtin_platform_driver macro says it's just a wrapper for > > > > I thought this was using module_platform_driver() macro? > > > > > device_initcall. > > > > > > Won't we then need to remove all the __initconst tags too since the > > > probe function walks through jh7100_clk_data which eventually > > > references all __initconst data? > > > > Yes. If it's builtin_platform_driver() it can't be a module/tristate > > Kconfig, in which case all the init markings can stay. > > Yes, it's already bool in the Kconfig file. After looking into this I > think it's better to do like the rockchip drivers and use > builtin_platform_driver_probe to make sure the probe function only > called at kernel init time: > > static struct platform_driver clk_starfive_jh7100_driver = { > .driver = { > .name = "clk-starfive-jh7100", > .of_match_table = clk_starfive_jh7100_match, > .suppress_bind_attrs = true, > }, > }; > builtin_platform_driver_probe(clk_starfive_jh7100_driver, > clk_starfive_jh7100_probe); > > @Andy: is the supress_bind_attrs what you were asking about? Clever chap! :-) Yes, that's what I have in mind. ... > > If it's never going to be a module then don't add any module_* things. > > So does that just mean no MODULE_DEVICE_TABLE or should I also remove > MODULE_DESCRIPTION, MODULE_AUTHOR and MODULE_LICENSE? I'm just double > checking because the rockchip drivers seem to have MODULE_DESCRIPTION > and MODULE_LICENSE lines. You may comment them out. Convert them to comments or so. But in general yes, they are no-ops in such case. -- With Best Regards, Andy Shevchenko