On Fri, Aug 07, 2015 at 03:42:06PM +0200, Sebastian Andrzej Siewior wrote: > On 08/07/2015 03:22 PM, Russell King - ARM Linux wrote: > > On Fri, Aug 07, 2015 at 12:36:14PM +0200, Sebastian Andrzej Siewior wrote: > >> On 08/07/2015 11:44 AM, Peter Ujfalusi wrote: > >>> with a short testing audio did not broke (the only user of pause/resume) > >>> Some comments embedded. > >>> > >>>> Cc: <stable@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> > >>> > >>> Why stable? This is not fixing any bugs since the PAUSE was not allowed for > >>> non cyclic transfers. > >> > >> Hmmm. The DRA7x was using pause before for UART. I just did not see it > >> coming that it was not allowed here. John made a similar change to the > >> edma driver and I assumed it went stable but now I see that it was just > >> cherry-picked into the ti tree. > > > > This is *NOT* stable material. > > > > Pause of these channels is something that omap-dma has *never* supported. > > Therefore, it is *not* a regression. What you are doing is *adding* a > > feature to the omap-dma driver. That is not stable material in any sense. > > Stable is for bug fixes to existing code, not feature enhancements. > > I didn't consider this as a feature. As it is something that the driver has _not_ supported, you are clearly adding a feature to an existing driver. It's not a bug fix. > > If something else has been converted to pause channels and that is causing > > a problem, then _that_ conversion is where the bug lies, not the lack of > > support in the omap-dma. > > So we had the 8250-DMA doing pause and all its current users implement > it. We have a DMA driver tree which is not used and it not implementing > pause (not implementing pause at all). Later we get a combo of 8250-DMA > + DMA driver that is broken because the lack of pause and this is > noticed a few kernel releases later. Right, so the patch which caused the regression is the one which arranged for the 8250-dma + omap-dma combination to work together, not the missing pause support in omap-dma. It doesn't matter that it's several releases old, it's that change caused the regression you have today. That change is incorrect today, and it was just as incorrect at the time that it was merged. > The only way of fixing the bug is by implementing the pause feature. That's not the only way of fixing the bug. As the binding of drivers is controlled by DT, you can disable the binding of these two drivers there and 8250 will go back to using non-DMA mode - which is the situation which existed prior to the change which coupled the two drivers together. That's an acceptable change for -stable trees, because it's reverting the change which caused the regression, taking us back to a situation we _know_ worked previously. Then, in mainline during the next merge window, we can introduce the pause feature to omap-dma, and re-enable the 8250 driver to use it. _Once_ that's proven stable, we can then take a view whether those changes should _then_ be backported to stable kernels with greater confidence that backporting the feature addition won't itself cause a new regression. -- FTTC broadband for 0.8mile line: currently at 10.5Mbps down 400kbps up according to speedtest.net. -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-omap" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html