Re: [PATCH v2] gpio: interrupt consistency check for OF GPIO IRQs

From: Lars Poeschel
Date: Mon Aug 26 2013 - 06:45:33 EST


On Friday 23 August 2013 at 21:52:20, Stephen Warren wrote:
> On 08/23/2013 12:45 PM, Linus Walleij wrote:
> > On Thu, Aug 22, 2013 at 11:10 PM, Stephen Warren
<swarren@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
> >> On 08/21/2013 05:36 PM, Linus Walleij wrote:
> >>> On Thu, Aug 22, 2013 at 1:10 AM, Stephen Warren
> >>> <swarren@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: [Me]
> >>>
> >>>>>> check if these in turn reference the interrupt-controller, and
> >>>>>> if they do, loop over the interrupts used by that child and
> >>>>>> perform gpio_request() and gpio_direction_input() on these,
> >>>>>> making them unreachable from the GPIO side.
> >>>>
> >>>> What about bindings that require a GPIO to be specified, yet don't
> >>>> allow an IRQ to be specified, and the driver internally does
> >>>> perform gpio_to_irq() on it? I don't think one can detect that
> >>>> case.
> >>>
> >>> This is still allowed. Consumers that prefer to have a GPIO
> >>> passed and convert it to IRQ by that call can still do so,
> >>> they will know what they're doing and will not cause the
> >>> double-command situation that we're trying to solve.
> >>
> >> Why not? There are certainly drivers in the kernel which request a
> >> GPIO as both a GPIO and as an (dual-edge) interrupt, so that they
> >> can read the GPIO input whenever the IRQ goes off, in order to
> >> determine the pin state. This is safer against high-latency or lost
> >> interrupts.
> >
> > Yes? Are we talking past each other here?
> >
> > This is a perfectly OK thing to do as long as it is done like
> > this:
> >
> > request_gpio(gpio);
> > gpio_direction_input(gpio);
> > request_irq(gpio_to_irq(gpio));
>
> But I'm not aware that there's a rule saying it's illegal to:
>
> request_irq(gpio_to_irq(gpio));
> request_gpio(gpio);
> gpio_direction_input(gpio);

But I'd consider this as a bug. What if the scheduler interrupts you right
after you requested (and got assigned) the interrupt and another entity
requests your gpio? Then you'd have a resource conflict, because you are
not the owner of the gpio you requested an interrupt for.
--
To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-kernel" in
the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html
Please read the FAQ at http://www.tux.org/lkml/