[PATCH] driver-core: platform: Resolve DT interrupt references late

Arnd Bergmann arnd at arndb.de
Wed Jan 8 11:25:17 EST 2014


On Wednesday 08 January 2014, Thierry Reding wrote:
> On Wed, Jan 08, 2014 at 04:11:08PM +0100, Arnd Bergmann wrote:
> > On Wednesday 08 January 2014 15:55:27 Thierry Reding wrote:
> > > It stands to reason that if they push back on the IOMMU variant of what
> > > is essentially the same thing, they will push back on the IRQ variant as
> > > well. One alternative I proposed was to, just as you suggested earlier,
> > > move the code into platform_drv_probe() or rather a function called from
> > > it. That proposal never got any replies, though.
> > > 
> > > 	https://lkml.org/lkml/2013/12/14/39
> > 
> > I guess putting it into the platform_drv_probe function seems reasonable,
> > I would be more scared of the implications of a notifier based method.
> 
> I fully agree. Of course if we decide against moving things into the
> core and in favour of a more generic API that drivers should use, then
> this issue goes away silently at least for resources that the driver
> needs to use explicitly (memory-mapped regions, interrupts, ...).
> 
> The issue remains for IOMMU which is meant to be used transparently
> through the DMA API. Perhaps a good compromise would be to have some
> sort of generic helper that can be called to initialize IOMMU support
> for a particular device and support probe deferral on error. Something
> like this perhaps:
> 
> 	int iommu_attach(struct device *dev);
> 	int iommu_detach(struct device *dev);
> 
> I still don't like very much how that needs to be done in each driver
> explicitly, but if we can't do it in the core, then the only other clean
> way to handle it would be to treat it like any other sort of resource
> and handle it explicitly. Perhaps handing out some sort of cookie would
> be preferable to just an error code?

The more I think about the iommu case, the more I am convinced that it
does belong into the core, in whatever form we can find. As far as I
can tell from the little reliable information I have on the topic, I
would assume that we can keep it in the DT probing code, as there won't
be a need for multiple arbitrary IOMMUs with ACPI or with board files.

> > > One downside of that approach is that, while it maps well to platform
> > > devices or generic devices that have some sort of firmware interface
> > > such as OF or ACPI, I don't see how it can be made to work with an I2C
> > > client that's registered from board setup code for example. Well, I
> > > suppose that problem could be solved by throwing another lookup table at
> > > it, just like we do for clocks, regulators, PWMs and GPIOs.
> > 
> > Wouldn't you still be able to attach resources in the traditional
> > way for those, but use the same new interface to get at them?
> 
> I wouldn't know how. For instance platform devices store the IRQ number
> within a struct resource of type IORESOURCE_IRQ, whereas I2C clients
> store them in the struct i2c_client's .irq field.

Good point, I forgot about the special case for i2c_client->irq.
I looked now and noticed that very few i2c devices actually use this
field, but larger number uses platform_data, which has a similar
problem.

> So without actually introspecting the struct device (possibly using the
> .bus field for example) and upcasting you won't know how to get at the
> resources. One possibility to remedy that would be to try and unify the
> resources within struct device. But that doesn't feel right.
> 
> One other thing I had considered at one point was to extend the bus_type
> structure and give it a way to obtain resources in a bus-specific way,
> but that feel even more wrong.
> 
> Perhaps I'm missing something obvious, though, and this is actually much
> more trivial to solve.

No trivial solution that I can see. I think we can deal with the case
where platform code uses platform_device->resources, and everything else
comes down to having multiple code branches in the driver, as we already
have to deal with platform_data and DT properties describing stuff that
doesn't fit in the resources.

	Arnd



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