Keerthy, On Wed, Apr 12, 2017 at 10:14:36PM +0530, Keerthy wrote: > > > On Wednesday 12 April 2017 10:01 PM, Grygorii Strashko wrote: > > > > > > On 04/12/2017 10:44 AM, Eduardo Valentin wrote: > >> Hello, > >> > > ... > > > >> > >> I agree. But there it nothing that says it is not reenterable. If you > >> saw something in this line, can you please share? > >> > >>>>> will you generate a patch to do this? > >>>> Sure. I will generate a patch to take care of 1) To make sure that > >>>> orderly_poweroff is called only once right away. I have already > >>>> tested. > >>>> > >>>> for 2) Cancel all the scheduled work queues to monitor the > >>>> temperature. > >>>> I will take some more time to make it and test. > >>>> > >>>> Is that okay? Or you want me to send both together? > >>>> > >>> I think you can send patch for step 1 first. > >> > >> I am happy to see that Keerthy found the problem with his setup and a > >> possible solution. But I have a few concerns here. > >> > >> 1. If regular shutdown process takes 10seconds, that is a ballpark that > >> thermal should never wait. orderly_poweroff() calls run_cmd() with wait > >> flag set. That means, if regular userland shutdown takes 10s, we are > >> waiting for it. Obviously this not acceptable. Specially if you setup > >> critical trip to be 125C. Now, if you properly size the critical trip to > >> fire before hotspot really reach 125C, for 10s (or the time it takes to > >> shutdown), then fine. But based on what was described in this thread, > >> his system is waiting 10s on regular shutdown, and his silicon is on > >> out-of-spec temperature for 10s, which is wrong. > >> > >> 2. The above scenario is not acceptable in a long run, specially from a > >> reliability perspective. If orderly_poweroff() has a possibility to > >> simply never return (or take too long), I would say the thermal > >> subsystem is using the wrong API. > >> > > > > > > Hh, I do not see that orderly_poweroff() will wait for anything now: > > void orderly_poweroff(bool force) > > { > > if (force) /* do not override the pending "true" */ > > poweroff_force = true; > > schedule_work(&poweroff_work); > > ^^^^^^^ async call. even here can be pretty big delay if system is under pressure > > } > > > > > > static int __orderly_poweroff(bool force) > > { > > int ret; > > > > ret = run_cmd(poweroff_cmd); > > When i tried with multiple orderly_poweroff calls ret was always 0. > So every 250mS i see this ret = 0. > > > ^^^^ no wait for the process - only for exec. flags == UMH_WAIT_EXEC > > > > if (ret && force) { > > So it never entered this path. ret = 0 so if is not executed. I think your setup has two major problems then: 1. when kernel runs userspace power off, it execs properly, in fact, it is not triggered. 2. when you finally exec it, it takes 5s to finish. If this is correct, I think my suggestions on the other email still holds. BR,
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