On Mon, Nov 28, 2022 at 11:51:10AM +0200, Andy Shevchenko wrote: > On Sun, Nov 27, 2022 at 05:00:40PM -0500, William Breathitt Gray wrote: > > On Sun, Nov 27, 2022 at 07:31:48PM +0100, Michael Walle wrote: > > > Am 2022-11-22 11:29, schrieb William Breathitt Gray: ... > > > gpiochip doesn't seem to be the correct place, gpiochip_add_irqchip() > > > is a noop for gpio-regmap, right? So using gpiochip_irqchip_init_hw() > > > seems wrong. > > > > > > Maybe make gpio-regmap call it on its own? But really we just connect > > > the regmap-irq to the gpiochip irqdomain. > > > > I think you're right, it feels strange to handle IRQ initialization via > > the GPIO framework. Maybe somewhere in regmap_irq might be more > > appropriate? > > The problem that that callback solves is possible interrupt storm, spurious > interrupts, and Use Before Initialized. > > If you can guarantee that in your case it never happens, add a comment > and go on. > > (It might be useful to tweak code a bit and try CONFIG_DEBUG_SHIRQ=y) > > > > What is the purpose of the > > > .init_hw callback? I've looked at other drivers which use regmap-irq > > > and they all seem to just initialize the hardware in their _probe(). > > > > > > -michael > > > > I'm not opposed to initializing the hardware in _probe(), although I can > > see merit in pushing that operation instead closer to the framework > > where the initialization is actually relevant. > > > > Andy, maybe you can shed some light about .init_hw; I think you > > introduced it to gpiolib in commit 9411e3aaa6342. > > It seems that commit message doesn't fully explain the situation behind > that change. But it was observed in real life, see above. FWIW, real life example: e986f0e602f1 ("pinctrl: intel: fix unexpected interrupt") -- With Best Regards, Andy Shevchenko