On Sat, Oct 17, 2015 at 07:14:13PM +0200, Alexander Holler wrote:
Hello,
here is the newest version of my patches to use a dependency based
initialization order. It now works without DT too.
Background:
Currently initcalls are ordered by some levels and the link order. This
means whenever a file is renamed, changes directory or a Makefile is
modified the order with which initcalls are called might change. This
might result in problems. Furthermore, the required dependencies are
often not documented, sometimes there are comments in the source or in a
commit message, but most often the knowledge why a specific initcall
belongs to a specific initcall level isn't obvious without carefully
examing he source. And initcalls are used by drivers and subsystems, and
the count of both have grown quiet a lot in the last years. So it's
rather difficult to maintain a proper link order.
Files move around very rarely, is this really an issue?
Another problem is that the link order can't be modified dynamically at
boot time to include dependencies dictated by the hardware. To circumvent
this, a brute-force trial-and-error mechanism called deferred probes has
been introduced, but this approach, while beeing KISS, has its own
problems.
What problems does deferred probing have? Why not just fix that if
there is issues with it, as it was supposed to solve this issue without
needing to annotate anything.
To solve these problems I've written patches to use a topological sort at
boot time which uses dependencies to calculate the order with which
initcalls are called.
Why? What are the benefits (assuming correct dependencies are available)?
- It offers a clear in-source documentation for dependencies between
initcalls.
- It is robust in regard to file or directory name changes and changes in
a Makefile.
- If enabled, the order with which drivers for interfaces are called
(e.g. network interfaces, hard disks), can be defined independent of
the link order. These might result in more stable interface names or
numbers.
- If enabled, it makes the the deferred probes obsolete, which might
result in faster boot times.
- If enabled, it is possible to call initcalls in parallel. E.g. the
shipped kernel for Fedora 21 (4.1.7-100.fc21.x86_64) contains around
560 initcalls. These are all called in series. Also some of them use
asynchronous stuff by themself, most don't do.
But that shipped kernel boots to X in less than 2 seconds, so there
isn't really a speed issue here, right?
Drawbacks:
- It requires a small amount of time to calculate the order a boot time.
But this time is most often smaller than the time saved by using
multiple cores to call initcalls or by not needing deferred probes.
How much time is needed?
- Dependencies are required. For everything which can be build as a
module, looking at modules.dep might give some pointers. Looking at
the help from menuconfig also might give some pointers. But in the
end, the most preferable way would be if maintainers or other people
which have a deeper knowledge about the source and functionality
would add the dependencies.
How will a "normal" driver author figure out what those dependancies are
in order to be able to write them down? That's my biggest objection
here, I have no idea how to add these, nor how to properly review such a
submission. What about systems that have different ordering/dependancy
requirements for the same drivers due to different ways the hardware is
hooked up? That is not going to work well here, unless I'm missing
something.