Thierry Reding <thierry.reding@xxxxxxxxx> writes: > From: Thierry Reding <treding@xxxxxxxxxx> > > The Tegra HDA controller driver committed in v3.16 causes deadlocks when > loaded as a module. The reason is that the driver core will lock the HDA > controller device upon calling its probe callback and the probe callback > then goes on to create child devices for detected codecs and loads their > modules via a request_module() call. This is problematic because the new > driver will immediately be bound to the device, which will in turn cause > the parent of the codec device (the HDA controller device) to be locked > again, causing a deadlock. > > This problem seems to have been present since the modularization of the > HD-audio driver in commit 1289e9e8b42f ("ALSA: hda - Modularize HD-audio > driver"). On Intel platforms this has been worked around by splitting up > the probe sequence into a synchronous and an asynchronous part where the > request_module() calls are asynchronous and hence avoid the deadlock. > > An alternative proposal is provided in this series of patches. Rather > than relying on explicit request_module() calls to load kernel modules > for HDA codec drivers, this implements a uevent callback for the HDA bus > to advertises the MODALIAS information to the userspace helper. > > Effectively this results in the same modules being loaded, but it uses > the more canonical infrastructure to perform this. Deferring the module > loading to userspace removes the need for the explicit request_module() > calls and works around the recursive locking issue because both drivers > will be bound from separate contexts. Tested-by: Kevin Hilman <khilman@xxxxxxxxxx> FWIW, I tested this on top of next-20150923, and it solves the boot problem I'm seeing on tegra124-jetson-tk1 with module loading. Kevin -- 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