Re: [PATCH v2 08/13] firmware: arm_scmi: Harden clock protocol initialization
From: Sudeep Holla
Date: Thu Mar 12 2026 - 11:39:18 EST
On Wed, Mar 11, 2026 at 06:45:41PM +0000, Cristian Marussi wrote:
> On Wed, Mar 11, 2026 at 05:59:43PM +0100, Geert Uytterhoeven wrote:
> > Hi Cristian,
> >
> > On Tue, 10 Mar 2026 at 19:56, Cristian Marussi <cristian.marussi@xxxxxxx> wrote:
> > > Add proper error handling on failure to enumerate clocks features or
> > > rates.
> > >
> > > Signed-off-by: Cristian Marussi <cristian.marussi@xxxxxxx>
>
> Hi,
>
> >
> > Thanks for your patch!
> >
> > > --- a/drivers/firmware/arm_scmi/clock.c
> > > +++ b/drivers/firmware/arm_scmi/clock.c
> >
> > > @@ -1143,8 +1149,12 @@ static int scmi_clock_protocol_init(const struct scmi_protocol_handle *ph)
> > > for (clkid = 0; clkid < cinfo->num_clocks; clkid++) {
> > > cinfo->clkds[clkid].id = clkid;
> > > ret = scmi_clock_attributes_get(ph, clkid, cinfo);
> > > - if (!ret)
> > > - scmi_clock_describe_rates_get(ph, clkid, cinfo);
> > > + if (ret)
> > > + return ret;
> >
> > This change breaks R-Car X5H with SCP FW SDKv4.28.0, as some clocks
> > do not support the SCMI CLOCK_ATTRIBUTES command.
> > Before, these clocks were still instantiated, but were further unusable.
> > After, the whole clock driver fails to initialize, and no SCMI clocks
> > are available at all.
>
> ...and this is exactly what I feared while doing this sort of hardening :P
>
> So there are a few possible solutions (beside reverting this straight away)
>
> The easy fix would be instead change the above in a
>
> if (ret)
> continue;
>
> ...with a bit of annoying accompanying FW_BUG logs, of course, to cause future
> FW releases to fix this :D
>
> Another option could be leave it as it is, since indeed it is the correct enforced
> behaviour, being CLOCK_ATTRIBUTES a mandatory command, BUT add on top an ad-hoc SCMI
> quirk targeting the affected FW releases...
>
> This latter option, though, while enforcing the correct behaviour AND
> fixing your R-Car issue, leaves open the door for a number of possible
> failures of other unknowingly buggy Vendors similarly deployed firmwares...
>
> ...that could be solved with more quirks of course...but...worth it ?
>
> Thoughts ?
>
> Let's see also what @Sudeep thinks about this...
>
I prefer to fix it as a quirk to prevent similar issues on newer platforms if
the firmware baselines are derived from it. In the worst case, we can relax
the hardening until we figure out a proper quirk-based solution.
--
Regards,
Sudeep