On Tue, Nov 29, 2011 at 01:04:12PM -0800, Bjorn Helgaas wrote: > On Tue, Nov 29, 2011 at 10:54 AM, Michael S. Tsirkin <mst@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > I think panic on iomap is there just for debugging. > > If we return NULL instead, the generic pci_iomap will > > DTRT so we don't need to roll our own. > > Just to be explicit about what "doing the right thing" means, here's > what I think is changing (I think the new behavior is OK, but it *is* > different): I think the change is that anyone calling ioport_map *directly* will fail. pci_iomap callers are mostly unaffected. > > Old behavior: Caller calls pci_iomap(), which panics in ioport_map(). Not really, the old pci_iomap simply returned NULL in this case, it did not call ioport_map. > New behavior: Caller calls pci_iomap(), ioport_map() returns NULL, > pci_iomap() returns NULL (failure), caller may check for failure. If > caller does not check for failure and passes the NULL to > ioread()/iowrite(), we WARN in bad_io_access(). > > > static inline void __iomem *ioport_map(unsigned long port, unsigned int len) > > { > > - return (void __iomem *) ioport_panic(); > > + pr_info("Trying to map an IO resource - it does not exit on tile.\n"); > > + return NULL; > > s/exit/exist/ > > Since we only expect to see this message during debugging, maybe it > could be more informative, e.g., use dump_stack() to identify the > offending driver? I don't think either the "Trying to map" message or > the "Bad IO access" message is enough to actually make progress in > debugging. > > Bjorn As explained above, only direct callers of ioport_map get a changed behaviour. If we start dumping stack there we will hurt users of pci_iomap which used to get a graceful failure and will start getting scary messages. Is does not seem to be worth doing to simplify debugging, right? How about sticking the function name in the pr_info message? A simple grep for ioport_map will then get you the culprit ... Like this: + pr_info("ioport_map: mapping IO resources is unsupported on tile.\n"); ? -- MST -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-pci" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html