Re: [PATCH 0/2] ACPI / hotplug / driver core: Special handling forcontainer devices

From: Greg Kroah-Hartman
Date: Sat Dec 28 2013 - 22:58:44 EST


On Fri, Dec 27, 2013 at 11:21:59PM +0100, Rafael J. Wysocki wrote:
> Hi Greg,
>
> The following series of 2 patches (patch [2/2] in particular) make changes
> needed to handle hot-removal of system container devices (represented by
> ACPI container and module device objects) on Fujitsu systems. Those devices
> represent things like CPU packages, so we need to be able to take care of them
> cleanly for things like in-the-field CPU socked replacement to work.
>
> The problem being addressed here is that on the systems in question the removal
> of container devices has to be carried out with the help of user space that
> needs to be notified of the container removal before the kernel attempts to
> offline any devices below the container (e.g. in the package represented by the
> container device object in the ACPI tables). However, our current code works
> the other way around and the entire thing is messed up.
>
> This patchset adds the bare bones of what's needed to address that issue and it
> should be possible to build on top of the code added by it in the future if
> need be.
>
> Patch [1/2] introduces a new demand_offline flag for struct acpi_hotplug_profile
> that makes acpi_scan_hot_remove() check the offline status of the device object's
> companion physical devices to start with and return -EBUSY if at least one of them
> is not offline.
>
> Patch [2/2] uses that flag to implement the container handling. The details are
> in the changelog, but that's how it works.
>
> During the initial namespace scan the container ACPI scan handler creates
> "physical" system container device under /sys/devices/system/container/ for
> each ACPI container object whose status is "present" at that time (the sysfs
> name of that device is the same as the sysfs name of the corresponding
> container object and they are linked to each other via the firmware_node and
> physical_node symbolic links, respectively). Those system container devices
> are initially online.
>
> The container ACPI scan handler has the demand_offline flag set in its hotplug
> profile, so when a container eject event happens, acpi_scan_hot_remove() will
> notice that the flag is set in the device object's scan handler and will
> check the online status of its "physical" companion device, which is online
> (that is the system container device the above paragraph is about). That will
> cause KOBJ_CHANGE to be emitted for the system container device and -EBUSY to
> be returned by acpi_scan_hot_remove(). User space is expected to respond to
> that KOBJ_CHANGE by doing what's necessary to remove the container.
>
> To that end, it needs to offline the system container device through its online
> sysfs attribute (which is present, because the bus type for containers provides
> the online and offline callbacks). However, the offline for system container
> devices will only succeed if the physical devices right below the container
> (e.g. in the package represented by it) are all offline, so user space will
> have to offline those devices before attempting to offline the system container
> device itself. When finished, user space can trigger the container removal
> with the help of the eject sysfs attribute of the ACPI container object pointed
> to by the system container device's firmware_node link (this time the check in
> acpi_scan_hot_remove() will succeed, because the system container device in
> question is now offline).
>
> Please let me know if you have any objections. If not, I'd like to queue up
> these patches for 3.14.

No objection from me, I've acked the second patch, feel free to take
both of them in your tree.

thanks,

greg k-h
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