+
+ ancildrv->driver.owner = owner;
+ ancildrv->driver.bus = &ancillary_bus_type;
+ ancildrv->driver.probe = ancillary_probe_driver;
+ ancildrv->driver.remove = ancillary_remove_driver;
+ ancildrv->driver.shutdown = ancillary_shutdown_driver;
+
I think that this part is wrong, probe/remove/shutdown functions should
come from ancillary_bus_type.
From checking other usage cases, this is the model that is used for probe, remove,
and shutdown in drivers. Here is the example from Greybus.
int greybus_register_driver(struct greybus_driver *driver, struct module *owner,
const char *mod_name)
{
int retval;
if (greybus_disabled())
return -ENODEV;
driver->driver.bus = &greybus_bus_type;
driver->driver.name = driver->name;
driver->driver.probe = greybus_probe;
driver->driver.remove = greybus_remove;
driver->driver.owner = owner;
driver->driver.mod_name = mod_name;
You are overwriting private device_driver
callbacks that makes impossible to make container_of of ancillary_driver
to chain operations.
I am sorry, you lost me here. you cannot perform container_of on the callbacks
because they are pointers, but if you are referring to going from device_driver
to the auxiliary_driver, that is what happens in auxiliary_probe_driver in the
very beginning.
static int auxiliary_probe_driver(struct device *dev)
145 {
146 struct auxiliary_driver *auxdrv = to_auxiliary_drv(dev->driver);
147 struct auxiliary_device *auxdev = to_auxiliary_dev(dev);
Did I miss your meaning?
I think you're misunderstanding the cases when the
bus_type.{probe,remove} is used vs the driver.{probe,remove}
callbacks. The bus_type callbacks are to implement a pattern where the
'probe' and 'remove' method are typed to the bus device type. For
example 'struct pci_dev *' instead of raw 'struct device *'. See this
conversion of dax bus as an example of going from raw 'struct device
*' typed probe/remove to dax-device typed probe/remove:
https://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/next/linux-next.git/commit/?id=75797273189d
Thanks Dan for the reference, very useful. This doesn't look like a a
big change to implement, just wondering about the benefits and
drawbacks, if any? I am a bit confused here.
First, was the initial pattern wrong as Leon asserted it? Such code
exists in multiple examples in the kernel and there's nothing preventing
the use of container_of that I can think of. Put differently, if this
code was wrong then there are other existing buses that need to be updated.
Second, what additional functionality does this move from driver to
bus_type provide? The commit reference just states 'In preparation for
introducing seed devices the dax-bus core needs to be able to intercept
->probe() and ->remove() operations", but that doesn't really help me
figure out what 'intercept' means. Would you mind elaborating?
And last, the existing probe function does calls dev_pm_domain_attach():
static int ancillary_probe_driver(struct device *dev)
{
struct ancillary_driver *ancildrv = to_ancillary_drv(dev->driver);
struct ancillary_device *ancildev = to_ancillary_dev(dev);
int ret;
ret = dev_pm_domain_attach(dev, true);
So the need to access the raw device still exists. Is this still legit
if the probe() is moved to the bus_type structure?
Sure, of course.
I have no objection to this change if it preserves the same
functionality and possibly extends it, just wanted to better understand
the reasons for the change and in which cases the bus probe() makes more
sense than a driver probe().
Thanks for enlightening the rest of us!
tl;dr: The ops set by the device driver should never be overwritten by
the bus, the bus can only wrap them in its own ops.
The reason to use the bus_type is because the bus type is the only
agent that knows both how to convert a raw 'struct device *' to the
bus's native type, and how to convert a raw 'struct device_driver *'
to the bus's native driver type. The driver core does:
if (dev->bus->probe) {
ret = dev->bus->probe(dev);
} else if (drv->probe) {
ret = drv->probe(dev);
}
...so that the bus has the first priority for probing a device /
wrapping the native driver ops. The bus ->probe, in addition to
optionally performing some bus specific pre-work, lets the bus upcast
the device to bus-native type.
The bus also knows the types of drivers that will be registered to it,
so the bus can upcast the dev->driver to the native type.
So with bus_type based driver ops driver authors can do:
struct auxiliary_device_driver auxdrv {
.probe = fn(struct auxiliary_device *, <any aux bus custom probe arguments>)
};
auxiliary_driver_register(&auxdrv); <-- the core code can hide bus details
Without bus_type the driver author would need to do:
struct auxiliary_device_driver auxdrv {
.drv = {
.probe = fn(struct device *), <-- no opportunity for bus
specific probe args
.bus = &auxilary_bus_type, <-- unnecessary export to device drivers
},
};
driver_register(&auxdrv.drv)
Thanks Dan, I appreciate the explanation.
I guess the misunderstanding on my side was that in practice the drivers
only declare a probe at the auxiliary level:
struct auxiliary_device_driver auxdrv {
.drv = {
.name = "my driver"
<<< .probe not set here.
}
.probe = fn(struct auxiliary_device *, int id),
}
It looks indeed cleaner with your suggestion. DaveE and I were talking
about this moments ago and made the change, will be testing later today.
Again thanks for the write-up and have a nice week-end.