On Wed, 20 Nov 2013 17:30:35 +0100 Stephen Warren <swarren@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: ... > >>> Does the above mean the following? > >>> > >>> int of_iommu_attach(struct device *dev) > >>> { > >>> int i; > >>> struct of_phandle_args args; > >>> > >>> of_property_for_each_phandle_with_args(dev->of_node, "iommus", > >>> "#iommu-cells", i, &args) > >>> if (!args->np->dev->driver) > >>> return -EPROBE_DEFER; > >>> return 0; > >>> } > >> > >> Not quite. The above would only check that a driver was bound to the > >> device. But if that device isn't an IOMMU then this doesn't help you. > > > > I thought that, as long as a device is a normal one, it's ok to let it > > go to be populated. > > I don't understand what that means. > > > We only care about that, IOMMU devices comes > > first, and clients should come later than IOMMUs, for population. In > > the above if all IOMMUs are not populated, client devices are always > > deferred. "args->np->dev" always points an IOMMU device in a > > loop. Otherwise(no "iommus=") it goes out from the loop immediately. > > I'm not sure what that means. Perhaps you're sauying the dev->driver > isn't set until the driver is probe()d for the device, so if > dev->driver!=NULL, then we know the driver probed() successfully for it? Yes > That does go most of the way, but as Thierry pointed out, it doesn't > guarantee that the dev->driver is an IOMMU driver, just that it's *some* > driver. Perhaps this won't actually make any difference in practice, but > AFAIK, all other subsystems do perform the strict check, so I don't see > why the IOMMU subsystem shouldn't. Ok, now I got the one Thierry pointed out. Will implement that. -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-tegra" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html