On 5/04/24 00:13, Ulf Hansson wrote: > On Thu, 4 Apr 2024 at 20:42, Adrian Hunter <adrian.hunter@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: >> >> On 28/03/24 16:20, Adrian Hunter wrote: >>> On 27/03/24 17:17, Ulf Hansson wrote: >>>> On Tue, 26 Mar 2024 at 11:25, Adrian Hunter <adrian.hunter@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: >>>>> >>>>> On 21/03/24 16:30, Mantas Pucka wrote: >>>>>> Generic sdhci code registers LED device and uses host->runtime_suspended >>>>>> flag to protect access to it. The sdhci-msm driver doesn't set this flag, >>>>>> which causes a crash when LED is accessed while controller is runtime >>>>>> suspended. Fix this by setting the flag correctly. >>>>>> >>>>>> Cc: stable@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx >>>>>> Fixes: 67e6db113c90 ("mmc: sdhci-msm: Add pm_runtime and system PM support") >>>>>> Signed-off-by: Mantas Pucka <mantas@xxxxxxxxxxxx> >>>>> >>>>> Acked-by: Adrian Hunter <adrian.hunter@xxxxxxxxx> >>>> >>>> Looks like this problem may exist for other sdhci drivers too. In >>>> particular for those that enables runtime PM, don't set >>>> SDHCI_QUIRK_NO_LED and don't use sdhci_runtime|suspend_resume_host(). >>>> >>>> Don't know if there is a better way to address this, if not on a case >>>> by case basis. Do you have any thoughts about this? >>> >>> Yes probably case by case, but I will look at it. >> >> There seem to be 3 that use runtime pm but not >> sdhci_runtime_suspend_host(): >> >> 1. dwcmshc_runtime_suspend() : only turns off the card clock >> via SDHCI_CLOCK_CONTROL register, so registers are presumably >> still accessible >> >> 2. gl9763e_runtime_suspend() : ditto >> >> 3. sdhci_tegra_runtime_suspend() : disables the functional >> clock via clk_disable_unprepare(), so registers are presumably >> still accessible >> >> sdhci_msm_runtime_suspend() is different because it also turns >> off the interface clock. >> >> But it looks like there are no similar cases. > > Not sure we should care, but it still looks a bit fragile to me. We > may also have a power-domain hooked up to the device, that could get > power gated too, in which case it's likely affecting the access to > registers. Thought some more about this, but there isn't an easy way to know if drivers are catering for SDIO card interrupt or SD card detect interrupt.