Hello, Peter.
On Wed, Aug 31, 2016 at 02:56:50PM +0300, Peter Ujfalusi wrote:
On 08/30/16 21:27, Bhaktipriya Shridhar wrote:
The workqueue "dac33_wq" queues a single work item &dac33->work and hence doesn't require ordering. Also, it is not being used on a memory reclaim path. Hence, it has been converted to use system_wq.
The work item has been flushed in dac33_soc_remove to ensure that there are no pending tasks while disconnecting the driver.
The reason why dac33 had it's own wq is that it is absolutely time critical that the work is not going to be delayed by the scheduling needs with the system_wq. If the work execution is delayed, we could run out of time in FIFO mode, which can cause the chip to hang do to FIFO underrun.
In the current implementation of wq, which has been around for many years now, there's no real timing advantage to using a dedicated workqueue or rather system_wq doesn't get blocked by other work items on it. They are all served by the same backend pools and dedicated workqueues mostly serve as attribute, flush and mem-reclaim domains.
Unfortunately I'm no longer able to test the dac33 as I don't have the HW any more.
If you are 100% percent sure that this is not going to delay the work, then I'm OK with the change, but I have used the dedicated queue at the time, because the system_wq given unpredictable latencies.
What kind of time frame are we talking about? If it really needs high priority, the right thing to do would be using a WQ_HIGHPRI workqueue.
Thanks.