Re: gpiochip_lock_as_irq on pins without FLAG_REQUESTED: bug or feature ?
From: Vincent Pelletier
Date: Fri Jul 02 2021 - 06:48:22 EST
On Fri, 2 Jul 2021 02:09:17 +0200, Linus Walleij <linus.walleij@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
> The basic reason is that gpiochips and irqchips are orthogonal.
> You can request an IRQ on a GPIO line without requesting the
> GPIO line for anything else.
>
> This is also used when drivers want to inspect the state of a GPIO
> line (read the value) while the same line triggers IRQs. This is
> perfectly legal. An extreme example is:
> drivers/media/cec/platform/cec-gpio/cec-gpio.c
Interesting, thank you very much.
> On Mon, Jun 28, 2021 at 5:37 AM Vincent Pelletier <plr.vincent@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:
> > Also, I notice that both gpiochip_hierarchy_add_domain and
> > gpiochip_reqres_irq call gpiochip_lock_as_irq, and I am surprised I do not
> > get any error about this: in my understanding only the first call on a given pin
> > should succeed, but with my WARN_ON I am seeing both stack traces and
> > no other warning.
>
> Hm that may be a subtle bug.
>
> The state is just a bool so the first to leave will turn out the lights
> for whoever is left in the room :P
Actually my question came from yet another misunderstanding on my side:
I expected this function to act as an exclusive access control (because
of the "lock" in the name), but I then realised my assumption is wrong.
So while this could be a subtle bug indeed (irq_disable without
irq_shutdown is not the exact same state as right after irq_startup),
it's likely not the one I'm chasing - if it leads to any actual issue
at all.
Regards,
--
Vincent Pelletier
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