Return-path: Received: from mail-pf0-f182.google.com ([209.85.192.182]:36411 "EHLO mail-pf0-f182.google.com" rhost-flags-OK-OK-OK-OK) by vger.kernel.org with ESMTP id S1751105AbdEaRLD (ORCPT ); Wed, 31 May 2017 13:11:03 -0400 Received: by mail-pf0-f182.google.com with SMTP id m17so13408658pfg.3 for ; Wed, 31 May 2017 10:11:03 -0700 (PDT) Date: Wed, 31 May 2017 10:10:59 -0700 From: Brian Norris To: Ganapathi Bhat , Nishant Sarmukadam Cc: linux-kernel@vger.kernel.org, Dmitry Torokhov , Amitkumar Karwar , Kalle Valo , linux-wireless@vger.kernel.org Subject: Re: [PATCH 01/14] mwifiex: pcie: properly synchronize, disable interrupts in driver callbacks Message-ID: <20170531171058.GA54739@google.com> (sfid-20170531_191127_169242_D63B0763) References: <20170525001119.64791-1-briannorris@chromium.org> MIME-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii In-Reply-To: <20170525001119.64791-1-briannorris@chromium.org> Sender: linux-wireless-owner@vger.kernel.org List-ID: By the way, this had a few review comments elsewhere, which I'll summarize here, since I plan to resubmit a new version sometime. On Wed, May 24, 2017 at 05:11:06PM -0700, Brian Norris wrote: > It seems that the implicit assumption of the mwifiex > {enable,disable}_int() callbacks is that after ->disable_int(), all > interrupt handling should be complete (synchronized) and not fire again > until after ->enable_int(). Also, interrupts should not be serviced > until after the first ->enable_int(). > > However, the PCIe driver does none of this. First, the existing > interrupt mask programming appears to only have an effect for legacy > interrupts. It doesn't actually prevent MSI/MSI-X interrupts. Second, > even when it might mask interrupts, we're doing nothing to ensure that > pending IRQs have finished processing; they could be already in-flight > when a CPU masks them. > > Another quirk of this driver's design is the use of a racy > "surprise_removed" check in mwifiex_pcie_interrupt(). This appears to > act like a racy poor-man's version of masking our interrupts -- it > allows us to short-circuit the ISR if it fires when we're not prepared > to handle more work. > > We can resolve this all by: > (a) disabling our IRQs after requesting them > (b) call {enable,disable}_irq() in the {enable,disable}_int() callbacks > (c) remove the racy '->surprise_removed' hack from > mwifiex_pcie_interrupt() > (d) document the effect (or lack thereof) of PCIE_HOST_INT_MASK, to > clarify and possibly prevent future misuse > > Along the way, I decided to use underscores to prefix the driver-private > forms of "disabling interrupts" (instead of the awkward "_noerr" suffix > used already), partly to discourage their use. > > Signed-off-by: Brian Norris > --- > drivers/net/wireless/marvell/mwifiex/pcie.c | 70 ++++++++++++++++++++--------- > 1 file changed, 49 insertions(+), 21 deletions(-) > > diff --git a/drivers/net/wireless/marvell/mwifiex/pcie.c b/drivers/net/wireless/marvell/mwifiex/pcie.c > index 394224d6c219..ea75315bf19d 100644 > --- a/drivers/net/wireless/marvell/mwifiex/pcie.c > +++ b/drivers/net/wireless/marvell/mwifiex/pcie.c > @@ -505,12 +505,10 @@ static int mwifiex_pm_wakeup_card_complete(struct mwifiex_adapter *adapter) > } > > /* > - * This function disables the host interrupt. > - * > - * The host interrupt mask is read, the disable bit is reset and > - * written back to the card host interrupt mask register. > + * This function masks the host interrupt. Effective only for legacy PCI > + * interrupts. > */ > -static int mwifiex_pcie_disable_host_int(struct mwifiex_adapter *adapter) > +static int __mwifiex_pcie_disable_host_int(struct mwifiex_adapter *adapter) > { > if (mwifiex_pcie_ok_to_access_hw(adapter)) { > if (mwifiex_write_reg(adapter, PCIE_HOST_INT_MASK, > @@ -525,18 +523,30 @@ static int mwifiex_pcie_disable_host_int(struct mwifiex_adapter *adapter) > return 0; > } > > -static void mwifiex_pcie_disable_host_int_noerr(struct mwifiex_adapter *adapter) > +/* > + * Disable interrupts, synchronizing with any outstanding interrupts. > + */ > +static void mwifiex_pcie_disable_host_int(struct mwifiex_adapter *adapter) > { > - WARN_ON(mwifiex_pcie_disable_host_int(adapter)); > + struct pcie_service_card *card = adapter->card; > + int i; > + > + WARN_ON(__mwifiex_pcie_disable_host_int(adapter)); > + > + if (card->msix_enable) { > + for (i = 0; i < MWIFIEX_NUM_MSIX_VECTORS; i++) { > + disable_irq(card->msix_entries[i].vector); > + } > + } else { > + disable_irq(card->dev->irq); This approach is not safe for the non-MSI-X case, since we actually requested this IRQ with IRQF_SHARED. That's likely mostly for the legacy PCI interrupt case (where we *have* to support shared interrupts) and could probably be modified, but at any rate, this is unsafe as written. Also, I've fielded objections to using the host-level IRQ masking for disabling MSI interrupts here. I'm still not completely sure *why* the objection, but I'm investigating whether there's any device-level mechanism for disabling MSI interrupts on the Wif card. (Marvell folks, feel free to speak up here.) > + } > } > > /* > - * This function enables the host interrupt. > - * > - * The host interrupt enable mask is written to the card > - * host interrupt mask register. > + * This function unmasks the host interrupt. Effective only for legacy PCI > + * interrupts. > */ > -static int mwifiex_pcie_enable_host_int(struct mwifiex_adapter *adapter) > +static int __mwifiex_pcie_enable_host_int(struct mwifiex_adapter *adapter) > { > if (mwifiex_pcie_ok_to_access_hw(adapter)) { > /* Simply write the mask to the register */ > @@ -551,6 +561,26 @@ static int mwifiex_pcie_enable_host_int(struct mwifiex_adapter *adapter) > return 0; > } > > +static int mwifiex_pcie_enable_host_int(struct mwifiex_adapter *adapter) > +{ > + struct pcie_service_card *card = adapter->card; > + int i, ret; > + > + ret = __mwifiex_pcie_enable_host_int(adapter); > + if (ret) > + return ret; > + > + if (card->msix_enable) { > + for (i = 0; i < MWIFIEX_NUM_MSIX_VECTORS; i++) { > + enable_irq(card->msix_entries[i].vector); > + } > + } else { > + enable_irq(card->dev->irq); > + } > + > + return 0; > +} > + > /* > * This function initializes TX buffer ring descriptors > */ > @@ -1738,7 +1768,7 @@ static int mwifiex_pcie_process_cmd_complete(struct mwifiex_adapter *adapter) > while (reg->sleep_cookie && (count++ < 10) && > mwifiex_pcie_ok_to_access_hw(adapter)) > usleep_range(50, 60); > - mwifiex_pcie_enable_host_int(adapter); > + __mwifiex_pcie_enable_host_int(adapter); > mwifiex_process_sleep_confirm_resp(adapter, skb->data, > skb->len); > } else { > @@ -2081,7 +2111,7 @@ static int mwifiex_prog_fw_w_helper(struct mwifiex_adapter *adapter, > "info: Downloading FW image (%d bytes)\n", > firmware_len); > > - if (mwifiex_pcie_disable_host_int(adapter)) { > + if (__mwifiex_pcie_disable_host_int(adapter)) { > mwifiex_dbg(adapter, ERROR, > "%s: Disabling interrupts failed.\n", __func__); > return -1; > @@ -2335,8 +2365,7 @@ static void mwifiex_interrupt_status(struct mwifiex_adapter *adapter, > if ((pcie_ireg == 0xFFFFFFFF) || !pcie_ireg) > return; > > - > - mwifiex_pcie_disable_host_int(adapter); > + __mwifiex_pcie_disable_host_int(adapter); > > /* Clear the pending interrupts */ > if (mwifiex_write_reg(adapter, PCIE_HOST_INT_STATUS, > @@ -2387,9 +2416,6 @@ static irqreturn_t mwifiex_pcie_interrupt(int irq, void *context) > } > adapter = card->adapter; > > - if (adapter->surprise_removed) > - goto exit; > - > if (card->msix_enable) > mwifiex_interrupt_status(adapter, ctx->msg_id); > else > @@ -2494,7 +2520,7 @@ static int mwifiex_process_pcie_int(struct mwifiex_adapter *adapter) > "info: cmd_sent=%d data_sent=%d\n", > adapter->cmd_sent, adapter->data_sent); > if (!card->msi_enable && adapter->ps_state != PS_STATE_SLEEP) > - mwifiex_pcie_enable_host_int(adapter); > + __mwifiex_pcie_enable_host_int(adapter); > > return 0; > } > @@ -3055,6 +3081,7 @@ static int mwifiex_pcie_request_irq(struct mwifiex_adapter *adapter) > &card->msix_ctx[i]); > if (ret) > break; > + disable_irq(card->msix_entries[i].vector); Also, if we're really dealing with spurious interrupts at init time, then this leaves a window of time in between request_irq() and this disable_irq() in which we could still receive a bad IRQ. So this should be reworked to do one of: (a) move the request_irq() later, until we're really able to handle interrupts (b) set the IRQ_NOAUTOEN flag (for the non-shared case), to avoid enabling IRQs initially (c) use some sort of (yet-unknown) device-level mask for MSI interrupts. I'm looking to address these problems in a v2. Many of the other patches are likely independent. I'll plan to resubmit them in the next series (if they aren't applied before then), to avoid conflicts with those that aren't independent, and because I intentionally put bugfixes (like this patch) first in the series. Brian > } > > if (ret) { > @@ -3087,6 +3114,7 @@ static int mwifiex_pcie_request_irq(struct mwifiex_adapter *adapter) > pr_err("request_irq failed: ret=%d\n", ret); > return -1; > } > + disable_irq(pdev->irq); > > return 0; > } > @@ -3244,7 +3272,7 @@ static struct mwifiex_if_ops pcie_ops = { > .register_dev = mwifiex_register_dev, > .unregister_dev = mwifiex_unregister_dev, > .enable_int = mwifiex_pcie_enable_host_int, > - .disable_int = mwifiex_pcie_disable_host_int_noerr, > + .disable_int = mwifiex_pcie_disable_host_int, > .process_int_status = mwifiex_process_int_status, > .host_to_card = mwifiex_pcie_host_to_card, > .wakeup = mwifiex_pm_wakeup_card, > -- > 2.13.0.219.gdb65acc882-goog >