Hi Théo, > > > The fatal conclusion of this is a deadlock: we acquire a lock on each > > > operation but while running the operation, we might want to runtime > > > resume and acquire the same lock. > > > > > > Anyway, those helpers (spi_controller_{suspend,resume}) are aimed at > > > system-wide suspend and resume and should NOT be called at runtime > > > suspend & resume. > > > > > > Side note: the previous implementation had a second issue. It acquired a > > > pointer to both `struct cqspi_st` and `struct spi_controller` using > > > dev_get_drvdata(). Neither embed the other. This lead to memory > > > corruption that was being hidden inside the big cqspi->f_pdata array on > > > my setup. It was working until I tried changing the array side to its > > > theorical max of 4, which lead to the discovery of this gnarly bug. > > > > > > Fixes: 0578a6dbfe75 ("spi: spi-cadence-quadspi: add runtime pm support") > > > Fixes: 2087e85bb66e ("spi: cadence-quadspi: fix suspend-resume implementations") > > > > Your commit log makes total sense but I believe the diff is gonna break > > again the suspend to RAM operation. This is only my understanding > > right after quickly going through the whole story, so maybe I'm > > totally off topic. > > The current ->runtime_suspend() implementation would indeed (probably) > work for suspend-to-RAM if it wasn't for the wrong pointers to cqspi > and spi_controller (see side note from commit message). Yeah, this probably needs to be fixed aside. > I've not found a moment where `struct cqspi_st` embed `struct > spi_controller` at its start, so I do not believe this has ever worked. > It might be the result of a mistake while porting a patch from a branch > that included other changes. > > > What happened if I understand the two commits blamed above: > > > > - There were PM hooks. > > - Someone turned them into runtime PM hooks (breaking regular > > suspend/resume). > > - Someone else added the "missing" suspend/resume logic inside the > > runtime PM hooks to fix suspend and resume. > > - You are removing this logic because it leads to deadlocks. > > > > There was likely a misconception of what is expected in both cases > > (quick and small power savings vs. full power cycle/loosing the whole > > configuration). > > > > I would propose instead to create two distinct set of functions: > > - One for runtime PM > > - One for suspend/resume > > This way the runtime PM no longer deadlocks and people using > > suspend/resume won't get affected? I don't know if your runtime hooks > > *will* always be called during a suspend/resume. I hope so, which would > > make the split quite easy and without any code duplication. > > That does indeed sound like the right approach. Runtime hooks can be > called from suspend/resume if needs be. Runtime PM then gets disabled > at the late stage. Would make sense indeed. > I do not believe currently system-wide suspend can be working. > spi_controller_{suspend,resume} are being called with a bogus pointer. > This makes me ask: should the system-wide suspend/resume part be > addressed with this patch or a follow-up? It feels like a separate > concern to me. Probably two patches, yes. Thanks, Miquèl