Re: [PATCH] mmc: sdhci-pci-gli: Disable LPM during initialization
From: Adrian Hunter
Date: Tue Nov 14 2023 - 05:26:37 EST
On 10/11/23 18:58, Sven van Ashbrook wrote:
> There's something happening in this driver that doesn't
> make much sense to me.
>
> According to the pm runtime docs [1] the initial runtime pm
> status of all devices is 'suspended'. Which I presume, means:
> if the driver doesn't use any of the pm_runtime_*() functions
> to tell the core "actually, I am active after probe", then the
> device remains suspended until explicitly going active, at which
> point the runtime_resume() callback is invoked.
>
> That's the theory. In practice, what do I see on a device
> containing this bridge?
> Intel SoC <-> PCIe bus <-> gl9763e bridge <-> eMMC bus <-> eMMC drive
>
> at probe() (does not exist in this driver so I stubbed it):
> [ 0.601542] runtime pm is enabled = 1 (disable_depth == 0)
> [ 0.601552] runtime pm is active = 2 (usage_count)
>
> at probe_slot():
> [ 0.602024] runtime pm is enabled = 1
> [ 0.602027] runtime pm is active = 2
>
> At add_host():
> [ 0.602804] runtime pm is enabled = 1
> [ 0.602809] runtime pm is active = 3
>
> It looks like:
> - nowhere does the gl9763e driver inform runtime pm it's active
PCI subsystem does it in pci_pm_init()
> - the device is active in probe(), probe_slot() and add_host()
> - the runtime_resume() callback did not get called before
> probe(), probe_slot(), or add_host().
>
> Why is the runtime_resume() callback not invoked?
Most drivers expect the device to be active at probe(). How it
gets that way is up to the bus. Note, the driver may call
pm_runtime_set_active() but that doesn't call runtime_resume().
> Does the driver have a runtime_pm misconfiguration issue here?
No
>
> Perhaps Rafael could clarify?
>
> [1] https://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/stable/linux.git/tree/Documentation/power/runtime_pm.rst?h=v6.6.1#n563