Hi,
On Mon, Jan 10, 2022 at 4:02 AM Thorsten Leemhuis regressions@leemhuis.info wrote:
Hi, this is your Linux kernel regression tracker speaking.
On 20.12.21 21:41, Marcelo Roberto Jimenez wrote:
On Mon, Dec 20, 2021 at 11:57 AM Bartosz Golaszewski brgl@bgdev.pl wrote:
On Sat, Dec 18, 2021 at 7:28 AM Thorsten Leemhuis regressions@leemhuis.info wrote:
[TLDR: I'm adding this regression to regzbot, the Linux kernel regression tracking bot; most text you find below is compiled from a few templates paragraphs some of you might have seen already.]
On 17.12.21 16:35, Marcelo Roberto Jimenez wrote:
Some GPIO lines have stopped working after the patch commit 2ab73c6d8323f ("gpio: Support GPIO controllers without pin-ranges")
And this has supposedly been fixed in the following patches commit 89ad556b7f96a ("gpio: Avoid using pin ranges with !PINCTRL") commit 6dbbf84603961 ("gpiolib: Don't free if pin ranges are not defined")
There seems to be a backstory here. Are there any entries and bug trackers or earlier discussions everyone that looks into this should be aware of?
Agreed with Thorsten. I'd like to first try to determine what's wrong before reverting those, as they are correct in theory but maybe the implementation missed something.
Have you tried tracing the execution on your platform in order to see what the driver is doing?
Yes. The problem is that there is no list defined for the sysfs-gpio interface. The driver will not perform pinctrl_gpio_request() and will return zero (failure).
I don't know if this is the case to add something to a global DTD or to fix it in the sysfs-gpio code.
Out of interest, has any progress been made on this front?
BTW, there was a last-minute commit for 5.16 yesterday that referenced the culprit Marcelo specified:
https://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/torvalds/linux.git/commit/?h...
This was for a BCM283x and BCM2711 devices, so I assume it won't help. Wild guess (I don't know anything about this area of the kernel): Marcelo, do the dts files for your hardware maybe need a similar fix?
I have tried to add "gpio-ranges" to the gpio-controllers in at91sam9x5.dtsi, but the system deadlocks, because in pinctrl-at91.c, function at91_pinctrl_probe() we have:
/* * We need all the GPIO drivers to probe FIRST, or we will not be able * to obtain references to the struct gpio_chip * for them, and we * need this to proceed. */ for (i = 0; i < gpio_banks; i++) if (gpio_chips[i]) ngpio_chips_enabled++;
if (ngpio_chips_enabled < info->nactive_banks) { dev_warn(&pdev->dev, "All GPIO chips are not registered yet (%d/%d)\n", ngpio_chips_enabled, info->nactive_banks); devm_kfree(&pdev->dev, info); return -EPROBE_DEFER; }
On the other hand, in gpiolib-of.c, function of_gpiochip_add_pin_range() we have:
if (!pctldev) return -EPROBE_DEFER;
In other words, the pinctrl needs all the gpio-controllers, and the gpio-controllers need the pinctrl. Each returns -EPROBE_DEFER and the system deadlocks.
Ciao, Thorsten
P.S.: As a Linux kernel regression tracker I'm getting a lot of reports on my table. I can only look briefly into most of them. Unfortunately therefore I sometimes will get things wrong or miss something important. I hope that's not the case here; if you think it is, don't hesitate to tell me about it in a public reply, that's in everyone's interest.
BTW, I have no personal interest in this issue, which is tracked using regzbot, my Linux kernel regression tracking bot (https://linux-regtracking.leemhuis.info/regzbot/). I'm only posting this mail to get things rolling again and hence don't need to be CC on all further activities wrt to this regression.
#regzbot poke
Regards, Marcelo.