2015-10-14 15:29 GMT+02:00 Daniel Thompson <daniel.thompson@xxxxxxxxxx>:
On 14/10/15 14:17, M'boumba Cedric Madianga wrote:
Hi Daniel,
+
+static int stm32_dma_remove(struct platform_device *pdev)
+{
+ struct stm32_dma_device *dmadev = platform_get_drvdata(pdev);
+
+ of_dma_controller_free(pdev->dev.of_node);
+
+ dma_async_device_unregister(&dmadev->ddev);
+
+ clk_disable_unprepare(dmadev->clk);
What is the purpose of disabling/unpreparing the clock here?
stm32_dma_alloc_chan_resources() and stm32_dma_free_chan_resources()
should
pair up and the clock should already be stopped.
stm32_dma_remove() could be called during an on-going transfer during
module unload.
So in that case, it seems that disabling/unpreparing the clock is needed.
Really?
I think we need to be sure any on-going transfers are stopped.
There are multiple reasons for this, not least the risk of executing a
callback that has been freed, but the one related to my point is that a
single clk_disable_unprepare() will remain broken because if you don't know
that the transfers have stopped then you don't know how many on-going
transfers there are.
In the next version, I am going to stop the DMA, free all interrupts
and kill tasklet in stm32_dma_remove.
In that way, all on-going transfers will be lost as we don't have to
wait the end of remaining transfer in order to execute this function
as quickly as possible.
But even with this improvement, I think I have to disable the clock here.