On Tue, May 25, 2010 at 12:52:12PM -0700, Kevin Hilman wrote: > Dmitry Torokhov <dmitry.torokhov@xxxxxxxxx> writes: > > > On Tue, May 18, 2010 at 04:46:53PM -0700, Kevin Hilman wrote: > >> If the _probe() method fails, the 'ts' struct is freed, yet it is > >> still used as the drvdata passed to suspend/resume/remove methods. > >> Even though the input device does not get registerd, the driver's > >> suspend/resume methods still get called as it's a registered SPI > >> device. This patch adds sanity checks to these methods to ensure that > >> drvdata is valid before using it. > >> > > > > This is a load of crap. If probe() fails that means that driver does not > > manage the device and thus ads7846_suspend() and ads7846_resume() should > > not be called _at all_. If SPI core manages to call random methods from > > the drivers that failed to bind to a device that should be fixed in SPI > > core. > > Agreed, this is indeed a bug in the SPI driver core. > > However, by fixing the SPI core to unregister the driver on failure > (patch below), we prevent the suspend & resume methods from being > called, but the driver's ->remove() method will still be called due to > the driver_unregister(). So at least the remove() method needs fixing > to prevent accessing free'd memory. > > Unless there are objections, I'll post the below along with an updated > version of ads7846 patch. > > Kevin > > diff --git a/drivers/spi/spi.c b/drivers/spi/spi.c > index b3a1f92..42d4d26 100644 > --- a/drivers/spi/spi.c > +++ b/drivers/spi/spi.c > @@ -175,6 +175,8 @@ static void spi_drv_shutdown(struct device *dev) > */ > int spi_register_driver(struct spi_driver *sdrv) > { > + int ret; > + > sdrv->driver.bus = &spi_bus_type; > if (sdrv->probe) > sdrv->driver.probe = spi_drv_probe; > @@ -182,7 +184,12 @@ int spi_register_driver(struct spi_driver *sdrv) > sdrv->driver.remove = spi_drv_remove; > if (sdrv->shutdown) > sdrv->driver.shutdown = spi_drv_shutdown; > - return driver_register(&sdrv->driver); > + > + ret = driver_register(&sdrv->driver); > + if (!ret) > + driver_unregister(&sdrv->driver); This is still wrong. driver_register() should properly clean up after itself and not require calls to driver_unregister() (and I believe it does). Besides, I do not see how this patch changes anything with regard to binding devices and drivers. Even if driver_register() succeeds, binding may still fail and we should not be calling neither ->remove(), nor ->suspend()/->resume() for the devices that failed to be bound. Still NAK, sorry. -- Dmitry -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-input" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html