Re: [PATCH 0/3] OMAP2+ hwmod fixes

[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]

 



Hello Benoît, Rajendra,

On Fri, 18 Feb 2011, Cousson, Benoit wrote:

> On 2/16/2011 2:43 PM, Nayak, Rajendra wrote:
> > > -----Original Message-----
> > > From: Cousson, Benoit [mailto:b-cousson@xxxxxx]
> > > Sent: Wednesday, February 16, 2011 6:37 PM
> > > To: Nayak, Rajendra
> > > Cc: linux-omap@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx; paul@xxxxxxxxx;
> > linux-arm-kernel@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
> > > Subject: Re: [PATCH 0/3] OMAP2+ hwmod fixes
> > > 
> > > Hi Rajendra,
> > > 
> > > On 2/16/2011 1:11 PM, Nayak, Rajendra wrote:
> > > > This series fixes some hwmod api return values
> > > > and also adds some state checks.
> > > > The hwmod iterator functions are made to
> > > > continue and not break if one of the
> > > > callback functions ends up with an error.
> > > 
> > > By doing that, you change the behavior of this function.
> > > I'm not sure I fully understand why.
> > > Could you elaborate on the use case?
> > 
> > Since these functions iterate over all hwmods
> > calling a common callback function, there might
> > be cases wherein the callback function for *some*
> > hwmods might fail. For instance, if you run through
> > all hwmods and try to clear the context registers
> > for all of them, for some hwmods which might
> > not have context registers the callback function
> > might return a -EINVAL, however that should not
> > stop you from attempting to clear the context
> > registers for the rest of the hwmods which have
> > them and abort the function midway, no?
> > This is more hypothetical, however the real usecase
> > that prompted me with this patch was when I
> > had some wrong state check in _setup function,
> > and the iterator would stop with the first failure
> > and not even attempt to setup the rest of the
> > hwmods.
> 
> Yeah, but by using that function you implicitly accept that an error will
> break the loop, so the function you pass to the iterator should be written for
> that. Meaning if you do not want to exit on error you should not report an
> error.
> 
> > > To avoid that behavior in the past, I was just returning
> > > 0 in case of failure to avoid stopping the iteration.
> > > It looks like you do not want to stop the iteration but still
> > > retrieve the error.
> > > I do not see in this series what you plan to do with the
> > > error at the end of the iteration.
> > 
> > Most users of these iterators would just use the non-zero
> > return value to throw an error/warning out stating there
> > were failures running through all the callback functions.
> > That does not change with this patch, and they can still
> > do it.
> 
> Except that now, the iterator is not able anymore to stop on error if needed
> potentially.
> My point is that you are changing the behavior of this function without
> maintaining the legacy.
> 
> So maybe creating a new iterator is a better approach.
> Even is this feature is not used today I have some secret plan for this
> behavior in the near future :-)
> 
> But my initial comment is still valid, if you do not care about the final
> error status after the iteration, you'd better not return any error at the
> beginning.
> This was the behavior or the _setup until now.

The original behavior of the iterator was intentional: loops over 
functions like _init_clocks() and _setup() should terminate upon 
encountering an error.  This is because the rest of that code currently 
relies on the hwmod/clock data to be accurate in order to work.  There is 
no provision in the code for a hwmod to fail initialization due to data 
errors.  The idea was that if the data is inaccurate, the data should be 
fixed first before doing anything else.

That said, I suppose that it's possible to enhance the code such that 
hwmods could be allowed to fail initialization, and simply brick 
themselves, rather than prevent the rest of the hwmods from initializing.  
Probably that would need a new _HWMOD_STATE_INIT_FAILED, or something 
similar.  If a hwmod would end up in that state, it must not be used by 
any other code, and the code should complain loudly.

The broader issue of whether the iterators should return immediately upon 
failure (as the current code does), or continue through the rest of the 
list, is a separate one.  I'd suggest one of two approaches:

1. If the rest of the code can be changed to gracefully handle cases where 
hwmod initialization fails, and if Benoît agrees, I don't have a problem 
with changing the iterator behavior to ignore failures as you describe.  
Of course, all of the current users of omap_hwmod_for_each*() would need 
to be checked to ensure that this behavior makes sense for them.

... or ...

2. The iterators could take an extra parameter that would control the 
behavior upon encountering an error: terminate, or continue.  But I am not 
sure that both cases are needed.  Ideas, feedback here are welcome.


- Paul

[Index of Archives]     [Linux Arm (vger)]     [ARM Kernel]     [ARM MSM]     [Linux Tegra]     [Linux WPAN Networking]     [Linux Wireless Networking]     [Maemo Users]     [Linux USB Devel]     [Video for Linux]     [Linux Audio Users]     [Yosemite Trails]     [Linux Kernel]     [Linux SCSI]

  Powered by Linux