[PATCH v3 1/7] acpi: Add early device probing infrastructure
Daniel Lezcano
daniel.lezcano at linaro.org
Tue Sep 29 05:17:37 PDT 2015
On 09/29/2015 09:29 AM, Marc Zyngier wrote:
> On Tue, 29 Sep 2015 06:30:52 +0200
> Daniel Lezcano <daniel.lezcano at linaro.org> wrote:
>
>>
>> Hi Marc,
>>
>> On 09/28/2015 04:49 PM, Marc Zyngier wrote:
>>> IRQ controllers and timers are the two types of device the kernel
>>> requires before being able to use the device driver model.
>>>
>>> ACPI so far lacks a proper probing infrastructure similar to the one
>>> we have with DT, where we're able to declare IRQ chips and
>>> clocksources inside the driver code, and let the core code pick it up
>>> and call us back on a match. This leads to all kind of really ugly
>>> hacks all over the arm64 code and even in the ACPI layer.
>>>
>>> In order to allow some basic probing based on the ACPI tables,
>>> introduce "struct acpi_probe_entry" which contains just enough
>>> data and callbacks to match a table, an optional subtable, and
>>> call a probe function. A driver can, at build time, register itself
>>> and expect being called if the right entry exists in the ACPI
>>> table.
>>>
>>> A acpi_probe_device_table() is provided, taking an identifier for
>>> a set of acpi_prove_entries, and iterating over the registered
>>> entries.
>>>
>>> Signed-off-by: Marc Zyngier <marc.zyngier at arm.com>
>>> ---
>>> drivers/acpi/scan.c | 39 +++++++++++++++++++++++
>>> include/asm-generic/vmlinux.lds.h | 10 ++++++
>>> include/linux/acpi.h | 66 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
>>> 3 files changed, 115 insertions(+)
>>>
>>> diff --git a/drivers/acpi/scan.c b/drivers/acpi/scan.c
>>> index f834b8c..daf9fc8 100644
>>> --- a/drivers/acpi/scan.c
>>> +++ b/drivers/acpi/scan.c
>>> @@ -1913,3 +1913,42 @@ int __init acpi_scan_init(void)
>>> mutex_unlock(&acpi_scan_lock);
>>> return result;
>>> }
>>> +
>>> +static struct acpi_probe_entry *ape;
>>> +static int acpi_probe_count;
>>> +static DEFINE_SPINLOCK(acpi_probe_lock);
>>> +
>>> +static int __init acpi_match_madt(struct acpi_subtable_header *header,
>>> + const unsigned long end)
>>> +{
>>> + if (!ape->subtable_valid || ape->subtable_valid(header, ape))
>>> + if (!ape->probe_subtbl(header, end))
>>> + acpi_probe_count++;
>>> +
>>> + return 0;
>>> +}
>>> +
>>> +int __init __acpi_probe_device_table(struct acpi_probe_entry *ap_head, int nr)
>>> +{
>>> + int count = 0;
>>> +
>>> + if (acpi_disabled)
>>> + return 0;
>>> +
>>> + spin_lock(&acpi_probe_lock);
>>> + for (ape = ap_head; nr; ape++, nr--) {
>>> + if (ACPI_COMPARE_NAME(ACPI_SIG_MADT, ape->id)) {
>>> + acpi_probe_count = 0;
>>> + acpi_table_parse_madt(ape->type, acpi_match_madt, 0);
>>
>> Isn't supposed 'acpi_table_parse_madt' to return the count ? and
>> shouldn't the return code be checked ?
>
> acpi_table_madt_parse() returns the count of the entries it has parsed.
> We're interested in the count of entries that have been successfully
> probed. Not quite the same thing.
>
> As for the return code, checking it is highly symbolic, because there
> is no way we can recover from an error in the ACPI parsing - we're
> dead anyway, as we end up without interrupt controller. I can add a
> WARN_ON(), but I'm not sure more noise will help understanding the
> problem.
>
> There is also the perfectly valid case where ACPI has been forcefully
> disabled (or on arm64, not forcefully enabled). In which case, the
> parsing code will abort early, and there is no reason to scream about
> it.
I see. Thanks for the details.
- Daniel
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