Re: [PATCH 1/2] staging/comedi/drivers: release allocated I/O regionif alloc_private fails

From: Ian Abbott
Date: Tue Jul 03 2012 - 06:18:54 EST


On 2012-07-02 16:57, H Hartley Sweeten wrote:
On Monday, July 02, 2012 1:41 AM, Ian Abbott wrote:
No. The I/O region will be deallocated in fl512_detach() because
dev->iobase has been set non-zero. fl512_detach() will be called by the
comedi core if fl512_attach() returns an error. This is an unusual
aspect of the comedi drivers.

I have been wondering if that aspect should be "fixed".

It's more typical for kernel drivers to clean up after themselves if
the probe/attach/init/etc. fails. And the release/detach/exit/etc.
is only called if the driver has successfully loaded.

With the comedi drivers, the "detach" is always called if the "attach"
failed. And, of course the "detach" is called when the device is removed.

Because of this the "detach" routines need to do all the checks to
see what needs to be cleaned up. Not a big deal but it does create
some confusion as this patch shows.

At the very least, this behaviour should be documented with a comment at the appropriate place in comedidev.h.

I think Comedi's current clean-up model is based on the open/close model of TTY driver operations, where the 'close' tty_operation is called when the 'open' tty_operation fails (although typically these operations don't do much allocation or deallocation).

Ian, what's your opinion on this? Do you think we should refactor all
the driver "attach" routines so they clean up on failure and fix the
core so the "detach" is only called after a successful "attach"?

It would be nicer, although the existing mechanism does have the slight advantage of using less code.

If this mechanism is adopted, drivers using the new mechanism should also be responsible for freeing their subdevices (which will need a new function comedi_free_subdevices()) and their comedi_device private data. (They're already responsible for freeing comedi_subdevice private data in their 'detach' routines.)

This would be a pretty big patch since it affects every driver as well
as the core.

We could break it up by introducing a temporary flag in the comedi_driver
struct that indicates if the driver has been "fixed". The core could then
work as-is for non-updated drivers. Once all the drivers have been updated
we then fix the core and remove the flag from all the drivers.

That sounds like a reasonable plan.

--
-=( Ian Abbott @ MEV Ltd. E-mail: <abbotti@xxxxxxxxx> )=-
-=( Tel: +44 (0)161 477 1898 FAX: +44 (0)161 718 3587 )=-
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