[U-Boot] [PATCH v2 18/26] dm: usb: Remove inactive children after a bus scan
Hans de Goede
hdegoede at redhat.com
Wed Nov 11 18:03:28 CET 2015
Hi,
On 11-11-15 00:30, Simon Glass wrote:
> Hi Hans,
>
> On 9 November 2015 at 12:25, Simon Glass <sjg at chromium.org> wrote:
>> Hi Hans,
>>
>> On 9 November 2015 at 00:22, Hans de Goede <hdegoede at redhat.com> wrote:
>>> Hi,
>>>
>>> On 09-11-15 07:48, Simon Glass wrote:
>>>>
>>>> Each scan of the USB bus may return different results. Existing
>>>> driver-model
>>>> devices are reused when found, but if a device no longer exists it will
>>>> stay
>>>> around, de-activated, but bound.
>>>>
>>>> Detect these devices and remove them after the scan completes.
>>>>
>>>> Signed-off-by: Simon Glass <sjg at chromium.org>
>>>
>>>
>>> I wonder how this is better then my original:
>>> "dm: usb: Use device_unbind_children to clean up usb devs on stop"
>>>
>>> Patch, the end result of both patches is the same and both are
>>> a NOP when DM_DEVICE_REMOVE is not set. Where as my code seems
>>> to be a much more KISS approach to the problem (my approach is
>>> just 3 lines vs 23 lines for yours).
>>>
>>> I know we will need usb_find_child in the DM_DEVICE_REMOVE not
>>> set case, but why not only revert the:
>>>
>>> "dm: usb: Rename usb_find_child to usb_find_emul_child"
>>>
>>> commit, keep the other 2 you revert and drop this patch ?
>>>
>>> This drops 3 patches from your patch-set and the end result is
>>> more clean IMHO.
>>
>> I would like to avoid binding/unbinding things when nothing changes if
>> possible. Also I'd like to support attaching device tree
>> nodes/properties to USB devices as necessary, as we do with PCI, and
>> removing things breaks that.
>>
>> I still have to figure out one more test case, so I'll do that before
>> commenting further.
>
> I've added the test case and pushed a new tree. However it turns out
> that this doesn't behave differently.
>
> So please can you go ahead and run your original (manual) test case?
> I'd like to make sure that my automated tests are correct and catch
> the bug you reported and fixed.
Ok, I've ran a whole battery of tests on your u-boot-dm/usb-working branch.
There are 2 issues:
1) You need to add these change to the commit introducing usb-keyb dm
support (or one of the related commits), otherwise usb-keyb support
breaks:
--- a/arch/arm/Kconfig
+++ b/arch/arm/Kconfig
@@ -513,6 +513,7 @@ config ARCH_SUNXI
select DM
select DM_GPIO
select DM_ETH
+ select DM_KEYBOARD
select DM_SERIAL
select DM_USB
select OF_CONTROL
The breakage is that without this usb_scan_device() returns -96
(EPFNOSUPPORT) for usb keyboards.
2) With that branch there still is the purely cosmetical issue,
that if one plugs a usb-stick + keyb into the same hub, then swaps
their place and do "usb reset" and then "usb tree" looks like this:
USB device tree:
1 Hub (480 Mb/s, 100mA)
| USB2.0 Hub
|
+-3 Human Interface (1.5 Mb/s, 100mA)
| SINO WEALTH USB Composite Device
|
+-2 Mass Storage (480 Mb/s, 100mA)
USB Flash Disk 4C0E960F
Notice the order of devices listed: 1 - 3 - 2, which is a bit weird,
as said this is purely cosmetical.
Note you can easily fix this by only reverting the:
"dm: usb: Rename usb_find_child to usb_find_emul_child"
commit, and keep the other 2 you revert and dropping this patch ?
As I already suggested before, this is both more KISS and as you
can see it solves some actually (admittedly very minor) issues.
I'm not really buying your arguments for your more complex solution,
as shown above re-using the devices actually causes issues.
Your other argument of wanting to attach device-tree properties
I also do not find a strong argument, for one there has never been
a need to do so sofar, and if we ever need this we need a way
to specify which usb-device the properties belong to based on
the topology under the host / root-hub anyway, and match things
up when first scanning the bus. And if we can match things up
on the first scan we can also match them up on subsequent scans
and attach the same of-node again.
Anyways I'm fine with doing things your way, but I still have
a preference for the more KISS and IMHO robust solution of
simple unbinding all devices on usb-stop.
###
Talking about usb-stop, there is still one (BIG!) problem after
this patch set when building usb-support with DM_DEVICE_REMOVE
not set. This means that the controllers dma engines will not
be stopped when booting the actual OS and they will still be
accessing parts of the main memory while the actual OS is
booting, which is BAD. So I suggest adding something like
this to all host drivers which use dma in this way:
#if defined CONFIG_DM_USB && !defined CONFIG_DM_DEVICE_REMOVE
#error The EHCI driver cannot be used without CONFIG_DM_DEVICE_REMOVE otherwise DMA stays active while booting the OS
#endif
Regards,
Hans
>
>>
>>>
>>>
>>>> Changes in v2: None
>>>>
>>>> drivers/usb/host/usb-uclass.c | 23 +++++++++++++++++++++++
>>>> 1 file changed, 23 insertions(+)
>>>>
>>>> diff --git a/drivers/usb/host/usb-uclass.c b/drivers/usb/host/usb-uclass.c
>>>> index 4aa92f8..50538e0 100644
>>>> --- a/drivers/usb/host/usb-uclass.c
>>>> +++ b/drivers/usb/host/usb-uclass.c
>>>> @@ -202,6 +202,20 @@ static void usb_scan_bus(struct udevice *bus, bool
>>>> recurse)
>>>> printf("%d USB Device(s) found\n", priv->next_addr);
>>>> }
>>>>
>>>> +static void remove_inactive_children(struct uclass *uc, struct udevice
>>>> *bus)
>>>> +{
>>>> + uclass_foreach_dev(bus, uc) {
>>>> + struct udevice *dev, *next;
>>>> +
>>>> + if (!device_active(bus))
>>>> + continue;
>>>> + device_foreach_child_safe(dev, next, bus) {
>>>> + if (!device_active(dev))
>>>> + device_unbind(dev);
>>>> + }
>>>> + }
>>>> +}
>>>> +
>>>> int usb_init(void)
>>>> {
>>>> int controllers_initialized = 0;
>>>> @@ -270,6 +284,15 @@ int usb_init(void)
>>>> }
>>>>
>>>> debug("scan end\n");
>>>> +
>>>> + /* Remove any devices that were not found on this scan */
>>>> + remove_inactive_children(uc, bus);
>>>> +
>>>> + ret = uclass_get(UCLASS_USB_HUB, &uc);
>>>> + if (ret)
>>>> + return ret;
>>>> + remove_inactive_children(uc, bus);
>>>> +
>>>
>>>
>>> Why do you need to call remove_inactive_children twice here? This seems
>>> worthy of a comment explaining why this is necessary.
>>
>> One is removing the children of USB controllers, one is removing the
>> children of USB hubs. I'll add a comment.
>>
>>>
>>>> /* if we were not able to find at least one working bus, bail out
>>>> */
>>>> if (!count)
>>>> printf("No controllers found\n");
>>
>> Regards,
>> Simon
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