On Thu, Dec 09, 2021 at 04:22:58PM -0500, Michael S. Tsirkin wrote: > On Thu, Nov 25, 2021 at 09:02:01PM +0100, Marcel Holtmann wrote: > > Hi Michael, > > > > > Device removal is clearly out of virtio spec: it attempts to remove > > > unused buffers from a VQ before invoking device reset. To fix, make > > > open/close NOPs and do all cleanup/setup in probe/remove. > > > > so the virtbt_{open,close} as NOP is not really what a driver is suppose > > to be doing. These are transport enable/disable callbacks from the BT > > Core towards the driver. It maps to a device being enabled/disabled by > > something like bluetoothd for example. So if disabled, I expect that no > > resources/queues are in use. > > > > Maybe I misunderstand the virtio spec in that regard, but I would like > > to keep this fundamental concept of a Bluetooth driver. It does work > > with all other transports like USB, SDIO, UART etc. > > > > > The cost here is a single skb wasted on an unused bt device - which > > > seems modest. > > > > There should be no buffer used if the device is powered off. We also don’t > > have any USB URBs in-flight if the transport is not active. > > > > > NB: with this fix in place driver still suffers from a race condition if > > > an interrupt triggers while device is being reset. Work on a fix for > > > that issue is in progress. > > > > In the virtbt_close() callback we should deactivate all interrupts. > > > > Regards > > > > Marcel > > So Marcel, do I read it right that you are working on a fix > and I can drop this patch for now? ping > -- > MST _______________________________________________ Virtualization mailing list Virtualization@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx https://lists.linuxfoundation.org/mailman/listinfo/virtualization