On Wed, Nov 29, 2023 at 03:50:21PM +0200, Andy Shevchenko wrote: > On Wed, Nov 29, 2023 at 12:17:39PM +0100, Lukas Wunner wrote: > > On Tue, Nov 28, 2023 at 07:45:06AM +0000, Shinichiro Kawasaki wrote: > > > On Nov 24, 2023 / 17:22, Andy Shevchenko wrote: ... > > > > Another possible solution I was thinking about is to have a local cache, > > > > so, make p2sb.c to be called just after PCI enumeration at boot time > > > > to cache the P2SB device's bar, and then cache the bar based on the device > > > > in question at the first call. Yet it may not remove all theoretical / > > > > possible scenarios with dead lock (taking into account hotpluggable > > > > devices), but won't fail the i801 driver in the above use case IIUC. > > > > > > Thanks for the idea. I created an experimental patch below (it does not guard > > > list nor free the list elements, so it is incomplete). I confirmed that this > > > patch avoids the deadlock. So your idea looks working. I still observe the > > > deadlock WARN, but it looks better than the hang by the deadlock. > > > > Your patch uses a list to store a multitude of struct resource. > > Is that actually necessary? I thought there can only be a single > > P2SB device in the system? > > > > > Having said that, Heiner says in another mail that "A solution has to support > > > pci drivers using p2sb_bar() in probe()". This idea does not fulfill it. Hmm. > > > > Basically what you need to do is create two initcalls: > > > > Add one arch_initcall to unhide the P2SB device. > > > > The P2SB subsequently gets enumerated by the PCI core in a subsys_initcall. > > > > Then add an fs_initcall which extracts and stashes the struct resource, > > hides the P2SB device and destroys the corresponding pci_dev. > > > > Then you don't need to acquire any locks at runtime, just retrieve the > > stashed struct resource. > > > > This approach will result in the P2SB device briefly being enumerated > > and a driver could in theory bind to it. Andy, is this a problem? > > I'm not seeing any drivers in the tree which bind to 8086/c5c5. > > At least one problem just out of my head. The P2SB on many system is PCI > function 0. Unhiding the P2SB unhides all functions on that device, and > we have use cases for those (that's why we have two first parameters to > p2sb_bar() in case we want non-default device to be looked at). For the clarity this is true for ATOM_GOLDMONT (see p2sb_cpu_ids array). -- With Best Regards, Andy Shevchenko