On Fri, Mar 08, 2019 at 11:17:38AM -0600, Bjorn Helgaas wrote: [...] > > >> +static int rcar_pcie_resume_noirq(struct device *dev) > > >> +{ > > >> + struct rcar_pcie *pcie = dev_get_drvdata(dev); > > >> + > > >> + if (rcar_pci_read_reg(pcie, PMSR) && > > >> + !(rcar_pci_read_reg(pcie, PCIETCTLR) & DL_DOWN)) > > >> + return 0; > > >> + > > >> + /* Re-establish the PCIe link */ > > >> + rcar_pci_write_reg(pcie, CFINIT, PCIETCTLR); > > >> + return rcar_pcie_wait_for_dl(pcie); > > >> +} > > >> + > > >> +static const struct dev_pm_ops rcar_pcie_pm_ops = { > > >> + .resume_noirq = rcar_pcie_resume_noirq, > > >> +}; > > > > > > I think there's the beginning of a convention to use #ifdef > > > CONFIG_PM_SLEEP around the ops themselves [1]. Otherwise I think > > > we'll get a warning about unused code when CONFIG_PM_SLEEP is unset. > > > > Only if I used SET_NOIRQ_SYSTEM_SLEEP_PM_OPS() , but I set the > > resume_noirq directly. > > Fair enough. I guess in this case if CONFIG_PM_SLEEP is unset, you > set the pointer, which avoids the "unused function" warning, but we > just never use that function pointer. > > My intent is to avoid needless differences when possible, so when I > review things like this I look at how other drivers do things. It > looks like all the other controllers use > SET_NOIRQ_SYSTEM_SLEEP_PM_OPS() or similar: > > git grep -A3 "static.*dev_pm_ops" drivers/pci/controller > > In the rcar case you only need the resume_fn, not the suspend_fn, so > SET_NOIRQ_SYSTEM_SLEEP_PM_OPS() does a little more than you need and > you'd have to pass NULL for suspend_fn. I didn't check them all > (suspend_noirq, freeze_noirq, poweroff_noirq), but at least for > suspend_noirq, all users check for NULL before calling through the > .suspend_noirq() function pointer, so I think that should be safe. It is a matter of consistency across drivers, yes, but that's something I can easily solve with a clean-up patch on top of Marek's one. I would merge this patch as-is and convert all the drivers to a uniform convention (which one I shall see). On a side note, this patch looks like a fix to me (even though it is not trivial for me to add a sensible Fixes: tag) and should be treated as such, so it should go in one of the upcoming -rc* (and I float the idea of sending it to stable kernels on which S2R is basically broken). Lorenzo