On Thu, May 07, 2020 at 02:51:43PM -0700, Dan Williams wrote: > On Thu, May 7, 2020 at 7:17 AM Jerry Snitselaar <jsnitsel@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > > > On Thu May 07 20, Hans de Goede wrote: > > >Hi All, > > > > > >On 4/10/20 11:06 PM, Jarkko Sakkinen wrote: > > >>On Thu, Apr 09, 2020 at 11:10:44PM +0200, Hans de Goede wrote: > > >>>Since commit dda8b2af395b ("tpm: Revert "tpm_tis_core: Set > > >>>TPM_CHIP_FLAG_IRQ before probing for interrupts"") we no longer set > > >>>the TPM_CHIP_FLAG_IRQ ever. > > >>> > > >>>So the whole IRQ probing code is not useful, worse we rely on the > > >>>IRQ-test path of tpm_tis_send() to call disable_interrupts() if > > >>>interrupts do not work, but that path never gets entered because we > > >>>never set the TPM_CHIP_FLAG_IRQ. > > >>> > > >>>So the remaining IRQ probe code calls request_irq() and never calls > > >>>free_irq() even when the interrupt is not working. > > >>> > > >>>On some systems, e.g. the Lenovo X1 8th gen, the interrupt we try > > >>>to use and never free creates an interrupt storm followed by > > >>>an "irq XX: nobody cared" oops. > > >>> > > >>>Since it is non-functional at the moment anyways, lets just completely > > >>>disable the IRQ code in tpm_tis_core for now. > > >>> > > >>>Fixes: dda8b2af395b ("tpm: Revert "tpm_tis_core: Set TPM_CHIP_FLAG_IRQ before probing for interrupts"") > > >>>Signed-off-by: Hans de Goede <hdegoede@xxxxxxxxxx> > > >>>--- > > >>>Note I'm working with Lenovo to try and get to the bottom of this. > > >>>--- > > >> > > >>OK if I recall correctly the reason for reverting was that the fixes > > >>Stefan was sending were broken and no access to hardware were the > > >>issues would be visible. The reason for not doing anything til this > > >>day is that we don't have T490 available. > > > > > >So as promised I have been in contact with Lenovo about this. > > > > > >Specifically I have been in contact with Lenovo about seeing an > > >IRQ storm when the tpm_tis code tries to use the IRQ on a X1 carbon > > >8th gen (X1C8), because of the now public plan that Lenovo will > > >offer ordering this model with Fedora pre-installed: > > >https://lwn.net/Articles/818595/ > > > > > >On the X1C8 the problem has been diagnosed to be a misconfigured > > >GPIO pin on the CPU (the SoC). The X1C8 uses an SPI connected > > >TPM chip with its IRQ connected to a GPIO on the SoC which is > > >configured in Direct IRQ mode, so that it directly asserts > > >IRQs on one of the APIC IRQs. The problem is that due to the > > >misconfiguration as soon as the IRQ is enabled it fires > > >continuously. > > > > > >For the X1C8 this should be fixed in the BIOS of the first > > >batch which gets shipped out to customers so there we should > > >not have to worry about this. > > > > > >It is likely (but not yet confirmed) that the issue on the T490 > > >is the same, although on my test X1C8 device I got an IRQ storm, > > >followed by the kernel disabling the IRQ, not a non booting system. > > >I guess this might be due to kernel configuration differences. > > > > > >Assuming that the issue on the T490 is the same, we might see a > > >BIOS update fixing this, but given that non-booting is > > >'not good ("tm")' even if there will be a BIOS fix we should > > >still do something at the kernel level to also work with the > > >older unfixed BIOS which is already out there. > > > > > >I've been thinking about this and I'm afraid that the only thing > > >what we can do is add a DMI product-name (product-version for Lenovo) > > >string based blacklist for IRQ usage to drivers/char/tpm/tpm_tis.c > > >and set tpm_info.irq = -1 for devices on that list. > > > > > >My plan is to prepare a RFC patch of such a blacklist, while we > > >wait for confirmation that the root cause on the T490 is the same > > >as on the X1C8, but before I work on that I'm wondering if > > >people agree that that is the best approach, or if there are > > >other suggestions for dealing with this ? > > > > > >Regards, > > > > > >Hans > > > > > > > Dan, > > > > Could this be the cause of the problem on the system you were > > seeing the issue with, or was that using PTT? > > It sounds similar, I'm just not immediately aware of where I can find > out how the GPIOs are routed on that development board. I'll poke > around. > > What's PTT? Intel fTPM. /Jarkko