On Mon, Oct 04, 2021 at 01:49:21PM +0100, Mark Brown wrote:
This still leaves a potential race where something (eg, an interrupt handler) could come in and try to schedule more SPI transfers on the shut down hardware. I'm really not sure we can do something that's totally robust here without also ensuring that all the client drivers also have effective shutdown implementations (which seems ambitious) or doing what we have now and unregistering the clients. I am, however, wondering if we really need the shutdown callback at all - the commit adding it just describes what it's doing, it doesn't explain why it's particularly needed. I guess there might be an issue on reboot with reset not completely resetting the hardware?
Shutdown is supposed to quiet the HW so it is not doing DMAs any more. This is basically an 'emergency' kind of path, the HW should be violently stopped if available - ie clearing the bus master bits on PCI, for instance.
When something like kexec happens we need the machine to be in a state where random DMA's are not corrupting memory.
Due to the emergency sort of nature it is not appropriate to do locking complicated sorts of things like struct device unregistrations here.
Jason