On Tue, Nov 30, 2021 at 11:27:12AM -0800, Prashant Malani wrote: > Hi Heikki, > > Thanks for taking a look at the series. > > On Tue, Nov 30, 2021 at 3:03 AM Heikki Krogerus > <heikki.krogerus@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > > > Hi Prashant, > > > > On Fri, Nov 26, 2021 at 11:40:49AM +0200, Heikki Krogerus wrote: > > > On Wed, Nov 24, 2021 at 03:10:06PM -0800, Prashant Malani wrote: > > > > This series resolves the cyclic dependency error which was introduced by > > > > commit 63cd78617350 ("usb: Link the ports to the connectors they are > > > > attached to") which lead to it being reverted. The approach here is to > > > > use a notifier to link a new Type C port to pre-existing USB ports > > > > instead of calling an iterator of usb ports from the Type C connector > > > > class. This allows commit 63cd78617350 ("usb: Link the ports to the > > > > connectors they are attached to") to then be submitted without any > > > > depmod cyclic dependency error. > > > > > > > > The final patch removes the usb port iterator since it is no longer > > > > needed. > > > > > > This is not enough. Build the Type-C Class as a module and the USB bus > > > statically, and the links will not get created. > > > > > I see. I suppose it is academic now (given your follow up email about converting > port-mapper to component framework), but would reversing where the > notifier block is i.e, > have usbcore expose the notifier registration API instead of > typec-class, resolve > the issue? That would mean the dependency is the same as what it is right now > in the code, right (typec -> usbcore) Well, then you would have the same issue if you build the Type-C class statically and USB as a module, no? I'm sure that if we though about this hard enough, we would find a way to make the notifiers work, most likely by handling every possible scenario separately, but it would still not remove the core problem. There is the dependency between these components/drivers. The proper solution does not create that dependency. Although I'm not sure that the component framework is the best (it is in the end just a workaround as well, but at least it's there available for everybody), by taking advantage of the _PLD we can create a solution where both components can live completely independently - the order in which they are registered becomes irrelevant as well as are they build as modules or not. > > > I'm not sure you actually achieve much with this series, and I'm not > > > sure this approach will ever fully solve the problem. As long as we > > > have to declare API, we will have the circular dependency issue on our > > > hands. But there are ways to avoid that. > > > > > > There is for example the component framework (drivers/base/component.c) > > > that I've been thinking about using here. In this case it would work > > > so that you declare the USB Type-C part as your aggregate driver, and > > > everything that is connected to it (so USB ports, DisplayPorts, TBT, > > > etc.) would then just declare themselves as general components. Could > > > you take a look at that? > > > > I'm preparing a patch where I store all _PLDs in the ACPI tables, and > > create list of devices that share it. I can convert port-mapper.c to > > it and the component framework while at it. > > Great, thanks. We can help with testing once you have a patch series > to share. OK, cool. thanks, -- heikki