From: Tomasz Michalec tmichalec@google.com
[ Upstream commit 8866f4e557eba43e991f99711515217a95f62d2e ]
If cros_typec_probe is called before EC device is registered, cros_typec_probe will fail. It may happen when cros-ec-typec.ko is loaded before EC bus layer module (e.g. cros_ec_lpcs.ko, cros_ec_spi.ko).
Return -EPROBE_DEFER when cros_typec_probe doesn't get EC device, so the probe function can be called again after EC device is registered.
Signed-off-by: Tomasz Michalec tmichalec@google.com Reviewed-by: Abhishek Pandit-Subedi abhishekpandit@chromium.org Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/20250610153748.1858519-1-tmichalec@google.com Signed-off-by: Tzung-Bi Shih tzungbi@kernel.org Signed-off-by: Sasha Levin sashal@kernel.org ---
LLM Generated explanations, may be completely bogus:
**Backport Status: YES**
This commit should be backported to stable kernel trees for the following reasons:
1. **Fixes a real user-facing bug**: The commit addresses a module loading race condition where `cros_ec_typec.ko` can fail to probe if loaded before the EC bus layer modules (`cros_ec_lpcs.ko`, `cros_ec_spi.ko`). This causes the Type-C functionality to completely fail on affected systems.
2. **Small and contained fix**: The change is minimal - only 2 lines of actual code changes: - Changes `dev_err()` to `dev_warn()` (cosmetic improvement) - Changes return value from `-ENODEV` to `-EPROBE_DEFER`
3. **Follows established kernel patterns**: The fix uses the standard `-EPROBE_DEFER` mechanism which is the proper way to handle driver dependencies in the Linux kernel. The driver already uses `-EPROBE_DEFER` in another location (line 1289) for a similar EC device check.
4. **No architectural changes**: This is a simple probe deferral fix that doesn't introduce new features or change any existing functionality. It merely allows the driver to retry probing later when dependencies are satisfied.
5. **Minimal regression risk**: Returning `-EPROBE_DEFER` instead of `-ENODEV` is a safe change that only affects the probe retry behavior. The driver will still fail eventually if the EC device never appears.
6. **Fixes a regression**: Looking at commit ffebd9053272 ("platform/chrome: cros_ec_typec: Check for EC device"), the check for parent EC device was added to handle older Chromebooks. However, it inadvertently broke systems where module loading order could vary, creating a race condition.
7. **Similar pattern in the subsystem**: Other Chrome platform drivers already use `-EPROBE_DEFER` for similar dependency handling (as seen in commit 13aba1e532f0).
The fix properly handles the asynchronous nature of driver loading in modern Linux systems where module loading order is not guaranteed, making it an important fix for system reliability.
drivers/platform/chrome/cros_ec_typec.c | 4 ++-- 1 file changed, 2 insertions(+), 2 deletions(-)
diff --git a/drivers/platform/chrome/cros_ec_typec.c b/drivers/platform/chrome/cros_ec_typec.c index 7678e3d05fd3..f437b594055c 100644 --- a/drivers/platform/chrome/cros_ec_typec.c +++ b/drivers/platform/chrome/cros_ec_typec.c @@ -1272,8 +1272,8 @@ static int cros_typec_probe(struct platform_device *pdev)
typec->ec = dev_get_drvdata(pdev->dev.parent); if (!typec->ec) { - dev_err(dev, "couldn't find parent EC device\n"); - return -ENODEV; + dev_warn(dev, "couldn't find parent EC device\n"); + return -EPROBE_DEFER; }
platform_set_drvdata(pdev, typec);