On Wed, Jun 5, 2024 at 4:16 AM Tomi Valkeinen <tomi.valkeinen@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > On 05/06/2024 13:53, Ulf Hansson wrote: > > On Wed, 5 Jun 2024 at 12:41, Tomi Valkeinen > > <tomi.valkeinen@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > >> > >> Hi Ulf, > >> > >> On 05/06/2024 12:34, Ulf Hansson wrote: > >>> + Tomi > >>> > >>> On Mon, 27 May 2024 at 14:41, Geert Uytterhoeven > >>> <geert+renesas@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: > >>>> > >>>> Hi all, > >>>> > >>>> Since commit a47cf07f60dcb02d ("serial: core: Call > >>>> device_set_awake_path() for console port"), the serial driver properly > >>>> handles the case where the serial console is part of the awake path, and > >>>> it looked like we could start removing special serial console handling > >>>> from PM Domain drivers like the R-Mobile SYSC PM Domain driver. > >>>> Unfortunately the devil is in the details, as usual... > >>>> > >>>> Earlycon relies on the serial port to be initialized by the firmware > >>>> and/or bootloader. Linux is not aware of any hardware dependencies that > >>>> must be met to keep the port working, and thus cannot guarantee they > >>>> stay met, until the full serial driver takes over. > >>>> > >>>> E.g. all unused clocks and unused PM Domains are disabled in a late > >>>> initcall. As this happens after the full serial driver has taken over, > >>>> the serial port's clock and/or PM Domain are no longer deemed unused, > >>>> and this is typically not a problem. > >>>> > >>>> However, if the serial port's clock or PM Domain is shared with another > >>>> device, and that other device is runtime-suspended before the full > >>>> serial driver has probed, the serial port's clock and/or PM Domain will > >>>> be disabled inadvertently. Any subsequent serial console output will > >>>> cause a crash or system lock-up. E.g. on R/SH-Mobile SoCs, the serial > >>>> ports share their PM Domain with several other I/O devices. After the > >>>> use of pwm (Armadillo-800-EVA) or i2c (KZM-A9-GT) during early boot, > >>>> before the full serial driver takes over, the PM Domain containing the > >>>> early serial port is powered down, causing a lock-up when booted with > >>>> "earlycon". > >>> > >>> Hi Geert, > >>> > >>> Thanks for the detailed description of the problem! As pointed out in > >>> regards to another similar recent patch [1], this is indeed a generic > >>> problem, not limited to the serial console handling. > >>> > >>> At Linaro Connect a few weeks ago I followed up with Saravana from the > >>> earlier discussions at LPC last fall. We now have a generic solution > >>> for genpd drafted on plain paper, based on fw_devlink and the > >>> ->sync_state() callback. I am currently working on the genpd series, > >>> while Saravana will re-spin the series (can't find the link to the > >>> last version) for the clock framework. Ideally, we want these things > >>> to work in a very similar way. > >>> > >>> That said, allow me to post the series for genpd in a week or two to > >>> see if it can solve your problem too, for the serial console. > >> > >> Both the genpd and the clock solutions will make suppliers depend on all > >> their consumers to be probed, right? > >> > >> I think it is a solution, and should be worked on, but it has the > >> drawback that suppliers that have consumers that will possibly never be > >> probed, will also never be able to turn off unused resources. > >> > >> This was specifically the case with the TI ti-sci pmdomain case I was > >> looking at: the genpd driver (ti_sci_pm_domains.c) provides a lot of > >> genpds for totally unrelated devices, and so if, e.g., you don't have or > >> don't want to load a driver for the GPU, all PDs are affected. > >> > >> Even here the solutions you mention will help: instead of things getting > >> broken because genpds get turned off while they are actually in use, the > >> genpds will be kept enabled, thus fixing the breakage. Unfortunately, > >> they'll be kept enabled forever. > >> > >> I've been ill for quite a while so I haven't had the chance to look at > >> this more, but before that I was hacking around a bit with something I > >> named .partial_sync_state(). .sync_state() gets called when all the > >> consumers have probed, but .partial_sync_state() gets called when _a_ > >> consumer has been probed. > >> > >> For the .sync_state() things are easy for the driver, as it knows > >> everything related has been probed, but for .partial_sync_state() the > >> driver needs to track resources internally. .partial_sync_state() will > >> tell the driver that a consumer device has probed, the driver can then > >> find out which specific resources (genpds in my case) that consumer > >> refers to, and then... Well, that's how far I got with my hacks =). > >> > >> So, I don't know if this .partial_sync_state() can even work, but I > >> think we do need something more on top of the .sync_state(). > > > > Thanks for the update! > > > > You certainly have a point, but rather than implementing some platform > > specific method, I think we should be able enforce the call to > > ->sync_state(), based upon some condition/timeout - and even if all > > consumers haven't been probed. > > Hmm, I think that was already implemented in some of the serieses out > there (or even in mainline already?), as I remember doing some > experiments with it. I don't like it much, though. > > With a simple timeout, it'll always be just a bit too early for some > user (nfs mount took a bit more time than expected -> board frozen). > > The only condition I can see that would somewhat work is a manual > trigger from the userspace. The boot scripts could then signal the > kernel when all the modules have been loaded and probably a suitable, > platform/use case specific amount of time has passed to allow the > drivers to probe. This is also already supported in mainline. Devices with sync_state() implementations (once Ulf adds it) will have a state_synced file in sysfs. It shows where it has been called yet or not. But you can also echo 1 into it to force the sync_state() callback (only if it hasn't been called already). So, yeah, all methods of handling this are available if you implement the sync_state() callback. By default it's all strict (wait till all consumers probe successfully). But you can set it to timeout (fw_devlink.sync_state). And you also have the option I mentioned above that you can use with both cases. -Saravana > > It just feels a bit too much of a "let's hope this work" approach. > > That said, the timeout/condition is probably acceptable for many cases, > where turning off a resource forcefully will just result in, say, a > temporarily blanked display, or something else that gets fixed if and > when the proper driver is probed. > > Unfortunately, here with the case I have, the whole board gets halted if > the display subsystem genpd is turned off and the display driver is > loaded after that. > > Tomi >