On 1/17/2015 8:01 AM, Uwe Kleine-König wrote: > Hello, > > On Fri, Jan 16, 2015 at 02:09:28PM -0800, Ray Jui wrote: >> On 1/15/2015 12:41 AM, Uwe Kleine-König wrote: >>> On Wed, Jan 14, 2015 at 02:23:32PM -0800, Ray Jui wrote: >>>> + */ >>>> + val = 1 << M_CMD_START_BUSY_SHIFT; >>>> + if (msg->flags & I2C_M_RD) { >>>> + val |= (M_CMD_PROTOCOL_BLK_RD << M_CMD_PROTOCOL_SHIFT) | >>>> + (msg->len << M_CMD_RD_CNT_SHIFT); >>>> + } else { >>>> + val |= (M_CMD_PROTOCOL_BLK_WR << M_CMD_PROTOCOL_SHIFT); >>>> + } >>>> + writel(val, iproc_i2c->base + M_CMD_OFFSET); >>>> + >>>> + time_left = wait_for_completion_timeout(&iproc_i2c->done, time_left); >>> >>> When the interrupt fires here after the complete timed out and before >>> you disable the irq you still throw the result away. >> Yes, but then this comes down to the fact that if it has reached the >> point that is determined to be a timeout condition in the driver, one >> should really treat it as timeout error. In a normal condition, >> time_left should never reach zero. > I don't agree here. I'm not sure there is a real technical reason, > though. But still if you're in a "success after timeout already over" > situation it's IMHO better to interpret it as success, not timeout. > The thing is, the interrupt should never fire after wait_for_completion_timeout returns zero here. If it does, then the issue is really that the timeout value set in the driver is probably not long enough. I just checked other I2C drivers. I think the way how timeout is handled here is consistent with other I2C drivers. >>>> +static int bcm_iproc_i2c_remove(struct platform_device *pdev) >>>> +{ >>>> + struct bcm_iproc_i2c_dev *iproc_i2c = platform_get_drvdata(pdev); >>>> + >>>> + i2c_del_adapter(&iproc_i2c->adapter); >>> You need to free the irq before i2c_del_adapter. >>> >> Yes. Thanks. Change back to use devm_request_irq, and use disable_irq >> here before removing the adapter. > The more lightweight approach is to set your device's irq-enable > register to zero and call synchronize_irq. (For a shared irq calling > disable_irq is even wrong here.) > The fact that IRQF_SHARED flag is not set indicates this is a dedicated IRQ line, so I thought using disable_irq here makes sense. But if both you and Wolfram think masking all I2C interrupts at the block level + synchronize_irq is a better approach, I can change to that. Thanks! > Best regards > Uwe > -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-i2c" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html