[PATCH] firmware: arm_scmi: Use WARN_ON() to check configured transports

Cristian Marussi cristian.marussi at arm.com
Mon Aug 9 02:22:45 PDT 2021


Use a WARN_ON() when SCMI stack is loaded to check the consistency of
configured SCMI transports instead of the current compile-time check
BUILD_BUG_ON() to avoid breaking bot-builds on random bad configs.

Bail-out early and noisy during SCMI stack initialization if no transport
was enabled in configuration since SCMI cannot work without at least one
enabled transport and such constraint cannot be enforced in Kconfig due to
circular dependency issues.

Reported-by: kernel test robot <lkp at intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Cristian Marussi <cristian.marussi at arm.com>
---
 drivers/firmware/arm_scmi/driver.c | 6 ++++--
 1 file changed, 4 insertions(+), 2 deletions(-)

diff --git a/drivers/firmware/arm_scmi/driver.c b/drivers/firmware/arm_scmi/driver.c
index b28111ea7c8b..b406b3f78f46 100644
--- a/drivers/firmware/arm_scmi/driver.c
+++ b/drivers/firmware/arm_scmi/driver.c
@@ -2067,9 +2067,11 @@ static int __init scmi_driver_init(void)
 {
 	int ret;
 
-	scmi_bus_init();
+	/* Bail out if no SCMI transport was configured */
+	if (WARN_ON(!IS_ENABLED(CONFIG_ARM_SCMI_HAVE_TRANSPORT)))
+		return -EINVAL;
 
-	BUILD_BUG_ON(!IS_ENABLED(CONFIG_ARM_SCMI_HAVE_TRANSPORT));
+	scmi_bus_init();
 
 	/* Initialize any compiled-in transport which provided an init/exit */
 	ret = scmi_transports_init();
-- 
2.17.1




More information about the linux-arm-kernel mailing list