On Sun, Oct 24, 2021 at 05:24:43PM +0300, Jarkko Sakkinen wrote: > On Sat, 2021-10-23 at 08:33 +0200, Greg Kroah-Hartman wrote: > > On Sat, Oct 23, 2021 at 04:02:48AM +0300, Jarkko Sakkinen wrote: > > > On Mon, 2021-10-18 at 16:35 +0200, Greg Kroah-Hartman wrote: > > > > > + ret = sysfs_create_group(&dev->kobj, &sgx_node_attr_group); > > > > > > > > A huge hint, if a driver has to call a sysfs_* call, something is wrong. > > > > > > > > Something is wrong here. > > > > > > > > Why are you messing around with a kobject? This is a device, that you > > > > control, you can just set the default attribute group for it and then > > > > the driver core will add and remove the sysfs group at the proper time, > > > > in the proper way. Right now you are racing userspace and loosing. > > > > > > > > Use the default group list, that is what it is there for. > > > > > > I used sysfs_create_group() because node_devices is not owned by SGX > > > code. It is managed in drivers/base/node.c, and also initialized before > > > SGX. > > > > Then that is broken, please do not use that device as your code does not > > "own" it. Or fix the logic to be initialized earlier. > > To get a synchronous initialization, I'd need to add the attributes as > part of this declaration: > > static struct attribute *node_dev_attrs[] = { > &dev_attr_cpumap.attr, > &dev_attr_cpulist.attr, > &dev_attr_meminfo.attr, > &dev_attr_numastat.attr, > &dev_attr_distance.attr, > &dev_attr_vmstat.attr, > NULL > }; > ATTRIBUTE_GROUPS(node_dev); > > That guarantees that the attribute exists at the time when the > node is created, e.g. in that sense this will fix the race with > uevent code. > > However, up until sgx_init() has been completed, the attribute > will emit '0'. Is that a problem? Who would be wanting to use sgx until that happens? You have this issue today anyway, right? > If I change sgx_init() from device_initcall() to > core_initcall() (i.e. one before postcore_initcall(), can I > expect these to work: > > * node_isset() > * node_set() > * num_possibles_nodes() > * numa_node_id() > * next_node_in() > > ? You should be able to test this out yourself :) thanks, greg k-h