On Mon, 2019-12-16 at 18:14 -0800, Dan Williams wrote:
On Mon, Dec 16, 2019 at 6:00 PM Jerry Snitselaar jsnitsel@redhat.com wrote:
On Mon Dec 16 19, Dan Williams wrote:
On Mon, Dec 16, 2019 at 4:59 PM Jarkko Sakkinen jarkko.sakkinen@linux.intel.com wrote:
On Wed, 2019-12-11 at 16:54 -0700, Jerry Snitselaar wrote:
Instead of repeatedly calling tpm_chip_start/tpm_chip_stop when issuing commands to the tpm during initialization, just reserve the chip after wait_startup, and release it when we are ready to call tpm_chip_register.
Cc: Christian Bundy christianbundy@fraction.io Cc: Dan Williams dan.j.williams@intel.com Cc: Peter Huewe peterhuewe@gmx.de Cc: Jarkko Sakkinen jarkko.sakkinen@linux.intel.com Cc: Jason Gunthorpe jgg@ziepe.ca Cc: Stefan Berger stefanb@linux.vnet.ibm.com Cc: stable@vger.kernel.org Cc: linux-integrity@vger.kernel.org Fixes: a3fbfae82b4c ("tpm: take TPM chip power gating out of tpm_transmit()") Fixes: 5b359c7c4372 ("tpm_tis_core: Turn on the TPM before probing IRQ's") Signed-off-by: Jerry Snitselaar jsnitsel@redhat.com
I pushed to my master with minor tweaks and added my tags.
Please check before I put it to linux-next.
I don't see it yet here:
http://git.infradead.org/users/jjs/linux-tpmdd.git/shortlog/refs/heads/maste...
However, I wanted to make sure you captured that this does *not* fix the interrupt issue. I.e. make sure you remove the "Fixes: 5b359c7c4372 ("tpm_tis_core: Turn on the TPM before probing IRQ's")" tag.
With that said, are you going to include the revert of:
1ea32c83c699 tpm_tis_core: Set TPM_CHIP_FLAG_IRQ before probing for interrupts
Dan, with the above reverted do you still get the screaming interrupt?
Yes, the screaming interrupt goes away, although it is replaced by these messages when the driver starts:
[ 3.725131] tpm_tis IFX0740:00: 2.0 TPM (device-id 0x1B, rev-id 16) [ 3.725358] tpm tpm0: tpm_try_transmit: send(): error -5 [ 3.725359] tpm tpm0: [Firmware Bug]: TPM interrupt not working, polling instead
If the choice is "error message + polled-mode" vs "pinning a cpu with interrupts" I'd accept the former, but wanted Jarkko with his maintainer hat to weigh in.
Is there a simple sanity check I can run to see if the TPM is still operational in this state?
What about T490S?
/Jarkko