Re: [PATCH V3 1/4] arm_pmu: acpi: Refactor arm_spe_acpi_register_device()

From: Anshuman Khandual
Date: Wed Aug 09 2023 - 03:02:05 EST




On 8/8/23 18:51, Will Deacon wrote:
> On Mon, Aug 07, 2023 at 11:03:40AM +0530, Anshuman Khandual wrote:
>> On 8/4/23 22:09, Will Deacon wrote:
>>> On Thu, Aug 03, 2023 at 11:43:27AM +0530, Anshuman Khandual wrote:
>>>> On 8/3/23 11:26, Anshuman Khandual wrote:
>>>>> + /*
>>>>> + * Sanity check all the GICC tables for the same interrupt
>>>>> + * number. For now, only support homogeneous ACPI machines.
>>>>> + */
>>>>> + for_each_possible_cpu(cpu) {
>>>>> + struct acpi_madt_generic_interrupt *gicc;
>>>>> +
>>>>> + gicc = acpi_cpu_get_madt_gicc(cpu);
>>>>> + if (gicc->header.length < len)
>>>>> + return gsi ? -ENXIO : 0;
>>>>> +
>>>>> + this_gsi = parse_gsi(gicc);
>>>>> + if (!this_gsi)
>>>>> + return gsi ? -ENXIO : 0;
>>>>
>>>> Moved parse_gsi() return code checking to its original place just to
>>>> make it similar in semantics to existing 'gicc->header.length check'.
>>>> If 'gsi' is valid i.e atleast a single cpu has been probed, return
>>>> -ENXIO indicating mismatch, otherwise just return 0.
>>>
>>> Wouldn't that still be the case without the check in this hunk? We'd run
>>> into the homogeneous check and return -ENXIO from there, no?
>> Although the return code will be the same i.e -ENXIO, but not for the same reason.
>>
>> this_gsi = parse_gsi(gicc);
>> if (!this_gsi)
>> return gsi ? -ENXIO : 0;
>>
>> This returns 0 when IRQ could not be parsed for the first cpu, but returns -ENXIO
>> for subsequent cpus. Although return code -ENXIO here still indicates IRQ parsing
>> to have failed.
>>
>> } else if (hetid != this_hetid || gsi != this_gsi) {
>> pr_warn("ACPI: %s: must be homogeneous\n", pdev->name);
>> return -ENXIO;
>> }
>>
>> This returns -ENXIO when there is a IRQ mismatch. But if the above check is not
>> there, -ENXIO return code here could not be classified into IRQ parse problem or
>> mismatch without looking into the IRQ value.
>
> Sorry, but I don't understand your point here. If any of this fails, there's
> going to be some debugging needed to look at the ACPI tables; the only
> difference with my suggestion is that you'll get a message indicating that
> the devices aren't homogeneous, which I think is helpful.

I dont have strong opinion either way. Hence will move 'this_gsi' check inside the
!gsi conditional check like you had suggested earlier.