On 7/19/22 15:19, Jonathan Cameron wrote: > On Tue, 19 Jul 2022 14:56:51 +0300 > Dmitry Osipenko <dmitry.osipenko@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > >> On 7/18/22 20:25, Jonathan Cameron wrote: >>> What turns this off again? I'd expect to see a devm_add_action_or_reset() >>> to do that in the !CONFIG_PM case. >>> >>> This is also an unusual pattern. As far as I can tell it works. >>> Normal trick for ensuring !CONFIG_PM works is to: >>> >>> 1) Unconditionally turn device on. >>> 2) Register unconditional device off devm_callback. Very rarely harmful even if device already off >>> due to runtime pm. >> >> If CONFIG_PM is disabled, do we really need to care about the power >> management on removal? >> > > Best effort + in general if we do something probe(), we want to do the > reverse in remove(). Sure it's not super important, but it's a nice > to have. This tends to get 'fixed' by people revisiting the driver > after it has merged. > >>> 3) Then call pm_runtime_set_active() so the state tracking matches. >> >> We can add pm_runtime_set_active() before h/w is touched for more >> consistency. On Steam Deck supplies are always enabled, but this may be >> not true for other devices. > > Generally set it wherever you 'enable' the device as you are indicating > the state after that has happened. That might be really early though. > >> >>> 4) Call >>> pm_runtime_mark_last_busy(dev); >>> pm_runtime_put_autosuspend(dev); >>> (here you have a function to do this anyway) >>> to let runtime_pm use same path as normal to autosuspend >>> >>> the upshot of this is that if !CONFIG_PM 3 and 4 do nothing and device >>> is left turned on. Is there something I'm missing that makes that cycle >>> inappropriate here? The main reason to do this is it then looks exactly >>> like any other runtime_pm calls elsewhere in the driver, so easier to review. >> >> It's appropriate, although caring about PM when it's disabled in kernel >> config could be unnecessary, IMO. It was my suggestion to keep the h/w >> enabled on driver's removal with !CONFIG_PM, minimizing the code. >> > For the cost of about 4-8 lines of code, I think it's worth having, but can > also see why you decided against. Alright, thank you for the review. Shreeya will address it all and prepare the v10. -- Best regards, Dmitry