On 2/16/24 16:07, Andy Shevchenko wrote: > On Fri, Feb 16, 2024 at 08:52:17AM +0100, Thomas Richard wrote: >> On 2/15/24 16:29, Andy Shevchenko wrote: >>> On Thu, Feb 15, 2024 at 04:17:50PM +0100, Thomas Richard wrote: > > ... > >>>> +int mux_chip_resume(struct mux_chip *mux_chip) >>>> +{ >>>> + int global_ret = 0; >>>> + int ret, i; >>>> + >>>> + for (i = 0; i < mux_chip->controllers; ++i) { >>>> + struct mux_control *mux = &mux_chip->mux[i]; >>>> + >>>> + if (mux->cached_state == MUX_CACHE_UNKNOWN) >>>> + continue; >>>> + >>>> + ret = mux_control_set(mux, mux->cached_state); >>>> + if (ret < 0) { >>>> + dev_err(&mux_chip->dev, "unable to restore state\n"); >>>> + if (!global_ret) >>>> + global_ret = ret; >>> >>> Hmm... This will record the first error and continue. >> >> In the v2 we talked about this with Peter Rosin. >> >> In fact, in the v1 (mux_chip_resume() didn't exists yet, everything was >> done in the mmio driver) I had the same behavior: try to restore all >> muxes and in case of error restore the first one. >> >> I don't know what is the right solution. I just restored the behavior I >> had in v1. > > Okay, I believe you know what you are doing, folks. But to me this approach > sounds at bare minimum "unusual". Because the failures here are not fatal > and recording the first one may or may not make sense and it's so fragile > as it completely implementation-dependent. I guess if there is an error, the resume is completely dead so no need to continue. If it's okay for Peter I can return on first failure. Regards, -- Thomas Richard, Bootlin Embedded Linux and Kernel engineering https://bootlin.com