[RFC PATCH 1/2] driver core: export driver_deferred_probe_trigger()

Greg Kroah-Hartman gregkh at linuxfoundation.org
Wed Aug 18 17:28:01 CEST 2021


On Wed, Aug 18, 2021 at 09:51:51AM -0500, Pierre-Louis Bossart wrote:
> 
> 
> >>> The issue is that the driver core is using drivers completing probe as a
> >>> proxy for resources becoming available.  That works most of the time
> >>> because most probes are fully synchronous but it breaks down if a
> >>> resource provider registers resources outside of probe, we might still
> >>> be fine if system boot is still happening and something else probes but
> >>> only through luck.
> > 
> >> The driver core is not using that as a proxy, that is up to the driver
> >> itself or not.  All probe means is "yes, this driver binds to this
> >> device, thank you!" for that specific bus/class type.  That's all, if
> >> the driver needs to go off and do real work before it can properly
> >> control the device, wonderful, have it go and do that async.
> > 
> > Right, which is what is happening here - but the deferred probe
> > machinery in the core is reading more into the probe succeeding than it
> > should.
> 
> I think Greg was referring to the use of the PROBE_PREFER_ASYNCHRONOUS
> probe type. We tried just that and got a nice WARN_ON because we are
> using request_module() to deal with HDaudio codecs. The details are in
> [1] but the kernel code is unambiguous...
> 
>         /*
> 	 * We don't allow synchronous module loading from async.  Module
> 	 * init may invoke async_synchronize_full() which will end up
> 	 * waiting for this task which already is waiting for the module
> 	 * loading to complete, leading to a deadlock.
> 	 */
> 	WARN_ON_ONCE(wait && current_is_async());
> 
> 
> The reason why we use a workqueue is because we are otherwise painted in
> a corner by conflicting requirements.
> 
> a) we have to use request_module()

Wait, why?

module loading is async, use auto-loading when the hardware/device is
found and reported to userspace.  Forcing a module to load by the kernel
is not always wise as the module is not always present in the filesystem
at that point in time at boot (think modules on the filesystem, not in
the initramfs).

Try fixing this issue and maybe it will resolve itself as you should be
working async.

thanks,

greg k-h


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