On Wed, Oct 07, 2020 at 12:42:29PM -0700, Matthias Kaehlcke wrote: > On Wed, Oct 07, 2020 at 03:25:42PM -0400, Alan Stern wrote: > > On Wed, Oct 07, 2020 at 10:28:47AM -0700, Matthias Kaehlcke wrote: > > > On Wed, Oct 07, 2020 at 12:38:38PM -0400, Alan Stern wrote: > > > > On Wed, Oct 07, 2020 at 09:03:36AM -0700, Matthias Kaehlcke wrote: > > > > > Ok, I wasn't sure if the hubs suspend asynchronously from each other. If they > > > > > do it should indeed not be a problem to have the "master" wait for its peers. > > > > > > > > Well, order of suspending is selectable by the user. It can be either > > > > asynchronous or reverse order of device registration, which might pose a > > > > problem. We don't know in advance which of two peer hubs will be > > > > registered first. It might be necessary to introduce some additional > > > > explicit synchronization. > > > > > > I'm not sure we are understanding each other completely. I agree that > > > synchronization is needed to have the primary hub wait for its peers, that > > > was one of my initial concerns. > > > > > > Lets use an example to clarify my secondary concern: a hub chip provides a > > > USB 3 and a USB 2 hub, lets say the USB 3 hub is the primary. > > > > > > Here is some pseudo-code for the suspend function: > > > > > > hub_suspend(hub) > > > ... > > > > > > if (hub->primary) { > > > device_pm_wait_for_dev(hub->peer) > > > > > > // check for connected devices and turn regulator off > > > } > > > > > > ... > > > } > > > > > > What I meant with 'asynchronous suspend' in this context: > > > > > > Can hub_suspend() of the peer hub be executed (asynchronously) while the > > > primary is blocked on device_pm_wait_for_dev(), > > > > Yes, that's exactly what would happen with async suspend. > > > > > or would the primary wait > > > forever if the peer hub isn't suspended yet? > > > > That wouldn't happen. device_pm_wait_for_dev is smart; it will return > > immediately if neither device uses async suspend. But in that case you > > could end up removing power from the peer hub before it had suspended. > > > > That's why I said you might need to add additional synchronization. The > > suspend routines for the two hubs could each check to see whether the > > other device had suspended yet, and the last one would handle the power > > regulator. The additional synchronization is for the case where the two > > checks end up being concurrent. > > That was exactly my initial concern and one of the reasons I favor(ed) a > platform instead of a USB driver: Clearly there's a tradeoff. > > otherwise all hubs need to know their peers and check in suspend if they > > are the last hub standing, only then the power can be switched off. > > To which you replied: > > > you just need to make the "master" hub wait for its peer to suspend, which > > is easy to do. > > However that apparently only works if async suspend is enabled, and we > can't rely on that. Yes, I had forgotten about the possibility of synchronous suspend. My mistake. > With the peers checking on each other you lose effectively the notion > of a primary. Well, you can still want to put the sysfs power-control attribute file into just one of the hubs' directories, and that one would be considered the primary. But I agree, it's a weak notion. > Going back to the binding: > > &usb_1_dwc3 { > hub_2_0: hub@1 { > compatible = "usbbda,5411"; > reg = <1>; > }; > > hub_3_0: hub@2 { > compatible = "usbbda,411"; > reg = <2>; > vdd-supply = <&pp3300_hub>; > companion-hubs = <&hub_2_0>; > }; > }; > > How does 'hub_2_0' know that its peer is hub_3_0 and that it has a regulator > (and potentially other resources)? The peering relation goes both ways, so it should be included in the hub_2_0 description too. Given that, the driver could check hub_2_0's peer's DT description for the appropriate resources. > All this mess can be avoided by having a single instance in control of the > resources which is guaranteed to suspend after the USB devices. Yes. At the cost of registering, adding a driver for, and making users aware of a fictitious platform device. Alan Stern