Message ID | 20170310024617.67303-3-briannorris@chromium.org (mailing list archive) |
---|---|
State | New, archived |
Delegated to: | Bjorn Helgaas |
Headers | show |
On 2017/3/10 10:46, Brian Norris wrote: > Currently, if we try to unbind the platform device, the remove will > succeed, but the removal won't undo most of the registration, leaving > partially-configured PCI devices in the system. > > This allows, for example, a simple 'lspci' to crash the system, as it > will try to touch the freed (via devm_*) driver structures. > > So let's implement device remove(). > As this patchset seems to be merged together so I think the following warning will be ok? if my git-am robot only pick your patch 1->compile-> patch 2->compile->patch 3 then drivers/pci/host/pcie-rockchip.c: In function 'rockchip_pcie_remove': drivers/pci/host/pcie-rockchip.c:1435:2: error: implicit declaration of function 'pci_unmap_iospace' [-Werror=implicit-function-declaration] pci_unmap_iospace(rockchip->io); but I guess you may need to move your patch 4 ahead of patch 3? > Signed-off-by: Brian Norris <briannorris@chromium.org> > --- > v2: > * unmap IO space with pci_unmap_iospace() > * remove IRQ domain > --- > drivers/pci/host/pcie-rockchip.c | 36 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++-- > 1 file changed, 34 insertions(+), 2 deletions(-) > > diff --git a/drivers/pci/host/pcie-rockchip.c b/drivers/pci/host/pcie-rockchip.c > index 5d7b27b1e941..d2e5078ae331 100644 > --- a/drivers/pci/host/pcie-rockchip.c > +++ b/drivers/pci/host/pcie-rockchip.c > @@ -223,9 +223,11 @@ struct rockchip_pcie { > int link_gen; > struct device *dev; > struct irq_domain *irq_domain; > - u32 io_size; > int offset; > + struct pci_bus *root_bus; > + struct resource *io; > phys_addr_t io_bus_addr; > + u32 io_size; > void __iomem *msg_region; > u32 mem_size; > phys_addr_t msg_bus_addr; > @@ -1360,6 +1362,7 @@ static int rockchip_pcie_probe(struct platform_device *pdev) > err, io); > continue; > } > + rockchip->io = io; > break; > case IORESOURCE_MEM: > mem = win->res; > @@ -1391,6 +1394,7 @@ static int rockchip_pcie_probe(struct platform_device *pdev) > err = -ENOMEM; > goto err_free_res; > } > + rockchip->root_bus = bus; > > pci_bus_size_bridges(bus); > pci_bus_assign_resources(bus); > @@ -1421,6 +1425,34 @@ static int rockchip_pcie_probe(struct platform_device *pdev) > return err; > } > > +static int rockchip_pcie_remove(struct platform_device *pdev) > +{ > + struct device *dev = &pdev->dev; > + struct rockchip_pcie *rockchip = dev_get_drvdata(dev); > + > + pci_stop_root_bus(rockchip->root_bus); > + pci_remove_root_bus(rockchip->root_bus); > + pci_unmap_iospace(rockchip->io); > + irq_domain_remove(rockchip->irq_domain); > + > + phy_power_off(rockchip->phy); > + phy_exit(rockchip->phy); > + > + clk_disable_unprepare(rockchip->clk_pcie_pm); > + clk_disable_unprepare(rockchip->hclk_pcie); > + clk_disable_unprepare(rockchip->aclk_perf_pcie); > + clk_disable_unprepare(rockchip->aclk_pcie); > + > + if (!IS_ERR(rockchip->vpcie3v3)) > + regulator_disable(rockchip->vpcie3v3); > + if (!IS_ERR(rockchip->vpcie1v8)) > + regulator_disable(rockchip->vpcie1v8); > + if (!IS_ERR(rockchip->vpcie0v9)) > + regulator_disable(rockchip->vpcie0v9); > + > + return 0; > +} > + > static const struct dev_pm_ops rockchip_pcie_pm_ops = { > SET_NOIRQ_SYSTEM_SLEEP_PM_OPS(rockchip_pcie_suspend_noirq, > rockchip_pcie_resume_noirq) > @@ -1438,6 +1470,6 @@ static struct platform_driver rockchip_pcie_driver = { > .pm = &rockchip_pcie_pm_ops, > }, > .probe = rockchip_pcie_probe, > - > + .remove = rockchip_pcie_remove, > }; > builtin_platform_driver(rockchip_pcie_driver); >
On 2017/3/10 11:22, Shawn Lin wrote: > On 2017/3/10 10:46, Brian Norris wrote: >> Currently, if we try to unbind the platform device, the remove will >> succeed, but the removal won't undo most of the registration, leaving >> partially-configured PCI devices in the system. >> >> This allows, for example, a simple 'lspci' to crash the system, as it >> will try to touch the freed (via devm_*) driver structures. >> >> So let's implement device remove(). >> > > As this patchset seems to be merged together so I think the following > warning will be ok? if my git-am robot only pick your patch 1->compile-> > patch 2->compile->patch 3 then > > drivers/pci/host/pcie-rockchip.c: In function 'rockchip_pcie_remove': > drivers/pci/host/pcie-rockchip.c:1435:2: error: implicit declaration of > function 'pci_unmap_iospace' [-Werror=implicit-function-declaration] > pci_unmap_iospace(rockchip->io); > > but I guess you may need to move your patch 4 ahead of patch 3? > Well, I am not sure if something is wrong here. But when booting up the system for the first time, we got [ 0.527263] PCI host bridge /pcie@f8000000 ranges: [ 0.527293] MEM 0xfa000000..0xfa5fffff -> 0xfa000000 [ 0.527308] IO 0xfa600000..0xfa6fffff -> 0xfa600000 [ 0.527544] rockchip-pcie f8000000.pcie: PCI host bridge to bus 0000:0 so the hierarchy(lspci -t) looks like: lspci -t -[0000:00]---00.0-[01]----00.0 and lspci 0000:00:00.0 Class 0604: Device 1d87:0100 0001:01:00.0 Class 0108: Device 8086:f1a5 (rev 03) but if I did unbind and bind, the bus number is different. lspci 0001:00:00.0 Class 0604: Device 1d87:0100 0001:01:00.0 Class 0108: Device 8086:f1a5 (rev 03) lspci -t -+-[0001:00]---00.0-[01]----00.0 \-[0000:00]- This hierarchy looks wrong to me. > >> Signed-off-by: Brian Norris <briannorris@chromium.org> >> --- >> v2: >> * unmap IO space with pci_unmap_iospace() >> * remove IRQ domain >> --- >> drivers/pci/host/pcie-rockchip.c | 36 >> ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++-- >> 1 file changed, 34 insertions(+), 2 deletions(-) >> >> diff --git a/drivers/pci/host/pcie-rockchip.c >> b/drivers/pci/host/pcie-rockchip.c >> index 5d7b27b1e941..d2e5078ae331 100644 >> --- a/drivers/pci/host/pcie-rockchip.c >> +++ b/drivers/pci/host/pcie-rockchip.c >> @@ -223,9 +223,11 @@ struct rockchip_pcie { >> int link_gen; >> struct device *dev; >> struct irq_domain *irq_domain; >> - u32 io_size; >> int offset; >> + struct pci_bus *root_bus; >> + struct resource *io; >> phys_addr_t io_bus_addr; >> + u32 io_size; >> void __iomem *msg_region; >> u32 mem_size; >> phys_addr_t msg_bus_addr; >> @@ -1360,6 +1362,7 @@ static int rockchip_pcie_probe(struct >> platform_device *pdev) >> err, io); >> continue; >> } >> + rockchip->io = io; >> break; >> case IORESOURCE_MEM: >> mem = win->res; >> @@ -1391,6 +1394,7 @@ static int rockchip_pcie_probe(struct >> platform_device *pdev) >> err = -ENOMEM; >> goto err_free_res; >> } >> + rockchip->root_bus = bus; >> >> pci_bus_size_bridges(bus); >> pci_bus_assign_resources(bus); >> @@ -1421,6 +1425,34 @@ static int rockchip_pcie_probe(struct >> platform_device *pdev) >> return err; >> } >> >> +static int rockchip_pcie_remove(struct platform_device *pdev) >> +{ >> + struct device *dev = &pdev->dev; >> + struct rockchip_pcie *rockchip = dev_get_drvdata(dev); >> + >> + pci_stop_root_bus(rockchip->root_bus); >> + pci_remove_root_bus(rockchip->root_bus); >> + pci_unmap_iospace(rockchip->io); >> + irq_domain_remove(rockchip->irq_domain); >> + >> + phy_power_off(rockchip->phy); >> + phy_exit(rockchip->phy); >> + >> + clk_disable_unprepare(rockchip->clk_pcie_pm); >> + clk_disable_unprepare(rockchip->hclk_pcie); >> + clk_disable_unprepare(rockchip->aclk_perf_pcie); >> + clk_disable_unprepare(rockchip->aclk_pcie); >> + >> + if (!IS_ERR(rockchip->vpcie3v3)) >> + regulator_disable(rockchip->vpcie3v3); >> + if (!IS_ERR(rockchip->vpcie1v8)) >> + regulator_disable(rockchip->vpcie1v8); >> + if (!IS_ERR(rockchip->vpcie0v9)) >> + regulator_disable(rockchip->vpcie0v9); >> + >> + return 0; >> +} >> + >> static const struct dev_pm_ops rockchip_pcie_pm_ops = { >> SET_NOIRQ_SYSTEM_SLEEP_PM_OPS(rockchip_pcie_suspend_noirq, >> rockchip_pcie_resume_noirq) >> @@ -1438,6 +1470,6 @@ static struct platform_driver >> rockchip_pcie_driver = { >> .pm = &rockchip_pcie_pm_ops, >> }, >> .probe = rockchip_pcie_probe, >> - >> + .remove = rockchip_pcie_remove, >> }; >> builtin_platform_driver(rockchip_pcie_driver); >> > >
On Fri, Mar 10, 2017 at 12:20:54PM +0800, Shawn Lin wrote: > On 2017/3/10 11:22, Shawn Lin wrote: > >On 2017/3/10 10:46, Brian Norris wrote: > >>Currently, if we try to unbind the platform device, the remove will > >>succeed, but the removal won't undo most of the registration, leaving > >>partially-configured PCI devices in the system. > >> > >>This allows, for example, a simple 'lspci' to crash the system, as it > >>will try to touch the freed (via devm_*) driver structures. > >> > >>So let's implement device remove(). > >> > > > >As this patchset seems to be merged together so I think the following > >warning will be ok? if my git-am robot only pick your patch 1->compile-> > >patch 2->compile->patch 3 then > > > >drivers/pci/host/pcie-rockchip.c: In function 'rockchip_pcie_remove': > >drivers/pci/host/pcie-rockchip.c:1435:2: error: implicit declaration of > >function 'pci_unmap_iospace' [-Werror=implicit-function-declaration] > > pci_unmap_iospace(rockchip->io); I'm not sure what you're doing here, but when I test patches 1-3, this all compiles fine for me. Maybe you're testing an old kernel that does not have pci_unmap_iospace()? > >but I guess you may need to move your patch 4 ahead of patch 3? No. Patch 4 is only necessary for building modules that can use those functions; your PCIe driver doesn't build as a module until patch 5. I'm going to guess that you're testing your hacky vendor tree, and not pure upstream. > Well, I am not sure if something is wrong here. > > But when booting up the system for the first time, we got > [ 0.527263] PCI host bridge /pcie@f8000000 ranges: > [ 0.527293] MEM 0xfa000000..0xfa5fffff -> 0xfa000000 > [ 0.527308] IO 0xfa600000..0xfa6fffff -> 0xfa600000 > [ 0.527544] rockchip-pcie f8000000.pcie: PCI host bridge to bus 0000:0 > > so the hierarchy(lspci -t) looks like: > lspci -t > -[0000:00]---00.0-[01]----00.0 > > and lspci > 0000:00:00.0 Class 0604: Device 1d87:0100 > 0001:01:00.0 Class 0108: Device 8086:f1a5 (rev 03) > > but if I did unbind and bind, the bus number is different. > > lspci > 0001:00:00.0 Class 0604: Device 1d87:0100 > 0001:01:00.0 Class 0108: Device 8086:f1a5 (rev 03) > > lspci -t > -+-[0001:00]---00.0-[01]----00.0 > \-[0000:00]- > > This hierarchy looks wrong to me. That looks like it's somewhat an artifact of lspci's tree view, which manufactures the 0000:00 root. I might comment on your "RFT" patch too but... it does touch on the problem (that the domain numbers don't get reused), but I don't think it's a good idea. What if we add another domain after the Rockchip PCIe domain? You'll clobber all the domain allocations the first time you remove the Rockchip one. Instead, if we want to actually stabilize this indexing across hotplug, we need the core PCI code to take care of this for us. e.g., maybe use one of the existing indexing ID mechanisms in the kernel, like IDR? Anyway, other than the bad lspci -t output, is there any actual bug here? I didn't think the domain numbers were actually so special. Brian
On 2017/3/11 3:40, Brian Norris wrote: > On Fri, Mar 10, 2017 at 12:20:54PM +0800, Shawn Lin wrote: >> On 2017/3/10 11:22, Shawn Lin wrote: >>> On 2017/3/10 10:46, Brian Norris wrote: >>>> Currently, if we try to unbind the platform device, the remove will >>>> succeed, but the removal won't undo most of the registration, leaving >>>> partially-configured PCI devices in the system. >>>> >>>> This allows, for example, a simple 'lspci' to crash the system, as it >>>> will try to touch the freed (via devm_*) driver structures. >>>> >>>> So let's implement device remove(). >>>> >>> >>> As this patchset seems to be merged together so I think the following >>> warning will be ok? if my git-am robot only pick your patch 1->compile-> >>> patch 2->compile->patch 3 then >>> >>> drivers/pci/host/pcie-rockchip.c: In function 'rockchip_pcie_remove': >>> drivers/pci/host/pcie-rockchip.c:1435:2: error: implicit declaration of >>> function 'pci_unmap_iospace' [-Werror=implicit-function-declaration] >>> pci_unmap_iospace(rockchip->io); > > I'm not sure what you're doing here, but when I test patches 1-3, this > all compiles fine for me. Maybe you're testing an old kernel that does > not have pci_unmap_iospace()? > >>> but I guess you may need to move your patch 4 ahead of patch 3? > > No. Patch 4 is only necessary for building modules that can use those > functions; your PCIe driver doesn't build as a module until patch 5. > > I'm going to guess that you're testing your hacky vendor tree, and not > pure upstream. > >> Well, I am not sure if something is wrong here. >> >> But when booting up the system for the first time, we got >> [ 0.527263] PCI host bridge /pcie@f8000000 ranges: >> [ 0.527293] MEM 0xfa000000..0xfa5fffff -> 0xfa000000 >> [ 0.527308] IO 0xfa600000..0xfa6fffff -> 0xfa600000 >> [ 0.527544] rockchip-pcie f8000000.pcie: PCI host bridge to bus 0000:0 >> >> so the hierarchy(lspci -t) looks like: >> lspci -t >> -[0000:00]---00.0-[01]----00.0 >> >> and lspci >> 0000:00:00.0 Class 0604: Device 1d87:0100 >> 0001:01:00.0 Class 0108: Device 8086:f1a5 (rev 03) >> >> but if I did unbind and bind, the bus number is different. >> >> lspci >> 0001:00:00.0 Class 0604: Device 1d87:0100 >> 0001:01:00.0 Class 0108: Device 8086:f1a5 (rev 03) >> >> lspci -t >> -+-[0001:00]---00.0-[01]----00.0 >> \-[0000:00]- >> >> This hierarchy looks wrong to me. > > That looks like it's somewhat an artifact of lspci's tree view, which > manufactures the 0000:00 root. > > I might comment on your "RFT" patch too but... it does touch on the > problem (that the domain numbers don't get reused), but I don't think > it's a good idea. What if we add another domain after the Rockchip > PCIe domain? You'll clobber all the domain allocations the first time > you remove the Rockchip one. Instead, if we want to actually stabilize > this indexing across hotplug, we need the core PCI code to take care of > this for us. e.g., maybe use one of the existing indexing ID mechanisms > in the kernel, like IDR? > > Anyway, other than the bad lspci -t output, is there any actual bug > here? I didn't think the domain numbers were actually so special. > No, it works fine. But I am going to guess (1) is there any code or user-space binary care about the domain numbers, so it will complain about this? (2) if there are two doamins for PCI hierarchy, so when I unbind and bind one of them continuously, is it possible that finally they will share the same domain number as the domain number would be overflow ? But actually they didn't share the same domain. :) I just thought we should fix the domain number here by adding "linux,pci-domain = <0>" for rk3399.dtsi, which seems more wise to me now. Does it make sense to you? > Brian > > >
On Mon, Mar 13, 2017 at 10:26:12AM +0800, Shawn Lin wrote: > I just thought we should fix the domain number here by adding > "linux,pci-domain = <0>" for rk3399.dtsi, which seems more wise > to me now. Does it make sense to you? I think that's fine (as noted in response to your patch). That doesn't really prevent this from being a core PCI domain bug though... BTW, I've been using this patch set to do some repeated remove/probe testing, and aside from the domain renumbering question and a small memory leak noticed by kmemleak (an existing bug; sending a patch shortly), this has been working well for me. Brian
On Thu, Mar 09, 2017 at 06:46:15PM -0800, Brian Norris wrote: > Currently, if we try to unbind the platform device, the remove will > succeed, but the removal won't undo most of the registration, leaving > partially-configured PCI devices in the system. > > This allows, for example, a simple 'lspci' to crash the system, as it > will try to touch the freed (via devm_*) driver structures. > > So let's implement device remove(). How exactly do you reproduce this problem? There are several other drivers that are superficially similar, e.g., they define a struct platform_driver without a .remove method. Do they all have this problem? Some of them do set .suppress_bind_attrs = true; is that relevant to this scenario? In fact, the only other callers of pci_remove_root_bus() are iproc_pcie_remove(), hv_pci_remove(), and vmd_remove(). These don't have .remove: imx6_pcie_driver ls_pcie_driver armada8k_pcie_driver artpec6_pcie_driver dw_plat_pcie_driver hisi_pcie_driver hisi_pcie_almost_ecam_driver spear13xx_pcie_driver gen_pci_driver These don't have .remove but do set .suppress_bind_attrs = true: dra7xx_pcie_driver qcom_pcie_driver advk_pcie_driver mvebu_pcie_driver rcar_pci_driver rcar_pcie_driver tegra_pcie_driver altera_pcie_driver nwl_pcie_driver xilinx_pcie_driver > Signed-off-by: Brian Norris <briannorris@chromium.org> > --- > v2: > * unmap IO space with pci_unmap_iospace() > * remove IRQ domain > --- > drivers/pci/host/pcie-rockchip.c | 36 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++-- > 1 file changed, 34 insertions(+), 2 deletions(-) > > diff --git a/drivers/pci/host/pcie-rockchip.c b/drivers/pci/host/pcie-rockchip.c > index 5d7b27b1e941..d2e5078ae331 100644 > --- a/drivers/pci/host/pcie-rockchip.c > +++ b/drivers/pci/host/pcie-rockchip.c > @@ -223,9 +223,11 @@ struct rockchip_pcie { > int link_gen; > struct device *dev; > struct irq_domain *irq_domain; > - u32 io_size; > int offset; > + struct pci_bus *root_bus; > + struct resource *io; > phys_addr_t io_bus_addr; > + u32 io_size; > void __iomem *msg_region; > u32 mem_size; > phys_addr_t msg_bus_addr; > @@ -1360,6 +1362,7 @@ static int rockchip_pcie_probe(struct platform_device *pdev) > err, io); > continue; > } > + rockchip->io = io; > break; > case IORESOURCE_MEM: > mem = win->res; > @@ -1391,6 +1394,7 @@ static int rockchip_pcie_probe(struct platform_device *pdev) > err = -ENOMEM; > goto err_free_res; > } > + rockchip->root_bus = bus; > > pci_bus_size_bridges(bus); > pci_bus_assign_resources(bus); > @@ -1421,6 +1425,34 @@ static int rockchip_pcie_probe(struct platform_device *pdev) > return err; > } > > +static int rockchip_pcie_remove(struct platform_device *pdev) > +{ > + struct device *dev = &pdev->dev; > + struct rockchip_pcie *rockchip = dev_get_drvdata(dev); > + > + pci_stop_root_bus(rockchip->root_bus); > + pci_remove_root_bus(rockchip->root_bus); > + pci_unmap_iospace(rockchip->io); > + irq_domain_remove(rockchip->irq_domain); > + > + phy_power_off(rockchip->phy); > + phy_exit(rockchip->phy); > + > + clk_disable_unprepare(rockchip->clk_pcie_pm); > + clk_disable_unprepare(rockchip->hclk_pcie); > + clk_disable_unprepare(rockchip->aclk_perf_pcie); > + clk_disable_unprepare(rockchip->aclk_pcie); > + > + if (!IS_ERR(rockchip->vpcie3v3)) > + regulator_disable(rockchip->vpcie3v3); > + if (!IS_ERR(rockchip->vpcie1v8)) > + regulator_disable(rockchip->vpcie1v8); > + if (!IS_ERR(rockchip->vpcie0v9)) > + regulator_disable(rockchip->vpcie0v9); > + > + return 0; > +} > + > static const struct dev_pm_ops rockchip_pcie_pm_ops = { > SET_NOIRQ_SYSTEM_SLEEP_PM_OPS(rockchip_pcie_suspend_noirq, > rockchip_pcie_resume_noirq) > @@ -1438,6 +1470,6 @@ static struct platform_driver rockchip_pcie_driver = { > .pm = &rockchip_pcie_pm_ops, > }, > .probe = rockchip_pcie_probe, > - > + .remove = rockchip_pcie_remove, > }; > builtin_platform_driver(rockchip_pcie_driver); > -- > 2.12.0.246.ga2ecc84866-goog >
Hi Bjorn, On Fri, Mar 24, 2017 at 09:25:41AM -0500, Bjorn Helgaas wrote: > On Thu, Mar 09, 2017 at 06:46:15PM -0800, Brian Norris wrote: > > Currently, if we try to unbind the platform device, the remove will > > succeed, but the removal won't undo most of the registration, leaving > > partially-configured PCI devices in the system. > > > > This allows, for example, a simple 'lspci' to crash the system, as it > > will try to touch the freed (via devm_*) driver structures. > > > > So let's implement device remove(). > > How exactly do you reproduce this problem? On RK3399: # echo f8000000.pcie > /sys/bus/platform/drivers/rockchip-pcie/unbind # lspci > There are several other drivers that are superficially similar, e.g., > they define a struct platform_driver without a .remove method. Do > they all have this problem? Some of them do set .suppress_bind_attrs > = true; is that relevant to this scenario? Yes, I think .suppress_bind_attrs would be enough to prevent this, according to my reading of the code and comments: * @suppress_bind_attrs: Disables bind/unbind via sysfs. > In fact, the only other callers of pci_remove_root_bus() are > iproc_pcie_remove(), hv_pci_remove(), and vmd_remove(). Then iProc would suffer from the same memory leak in of_pci_get_host_bridge_resources() [1]. It *would* suffer from the same domain allocation issues in of_pci_bus_find_domain_nr() -> pci_get_new_domain_nr() [2], except that all iProc device trees (in mainline at least) use the 'linux,pci-domain' property to avoid it. HyperV and VMD drivers use ACPI, which uses neither pci_get_new_domain_nr() nor of_pci_get_host_bridge_resources(). > These don't have .remove: > > imx6_pcie_driver > ls_pcie_driver > armada8k_pcie_driver > artpec6_pcie_driver > dw_plat_pcie_driver > hisi_pcie_driver > hisi_pcie_almost_ecam_driver > spear13xx_pcie_driver > gen_pci_driver I think these are all technically broken. > These don't have .remove but do set .suppress_bind_attrs = true: > > dra7xx_pcie_driver > qcom_pcie_driver > advk_pcie_driver > mvebu_pcie_driver > rcar_pci_driver > rcar_pcie_driver > tegra_pcie_driver > altera_pcie_driver > nwl_pcie_driver > xilinx_pcie_driver Those are fine then, I suppose. Brian [1] PCI: return resource_entry in pci_add_resource helpers https://patchwork.kernel.org/patch/9642229/ of/pci: Fix memory leak in of_pci_get_host_bridge_resources https://patchwork.kernel.org/patch/9642231/ [2] PCI: use IDA to manage domain number if not getting it from DT https://patchwork.kernel.org/patch/9638353/
On Fri, Mar 24, 2017 at 10:22:19AM -0700, Brian Norris wrote: > Hi Bjorn, > > On Fri, Mar 24, 2017 at 09:25:41AM -0500, Bjorn Helgaas wrote: > > On Thu, Mar 09, 2017 at 06:46:15PM -0800, Brian Norris wrote: > > > Currently, if we try to unbind the platform device, the remove will > > > succeed, but the removal won't undo most of the registration, leaving > > > partially-configured PCI devices in the system. > > > > > > This allows, for example, a simple 'lspci' to crash the system, as it > > > will try to touch the freed (via devm_*) driver structures. > > > > > > So let's implement device remove(). > > > > How exactly do you reproduce this problem? > > On RK3399: > > # echo f8000000.pcie > /sys/bus/platform/drivers/rockchip-pcie/unbind > # lspci > > > There are several other drivers that are superficially similar, e.g., > > they define a struct platform_driver without a .remove method. Do > > they all have this problem? Some of them do set .suppress_bind_attrs > > = true; is that relevant to this scenario? > > Yes, I think .suppress_bind_attrs would be enough to prevent this, > according to my reading of the code and comments: > > * @suppress_bind_attrs: Disables bind/unbind via sysfs. > > > In fact, the only other callers of pci_remove_root_bus() are > > iproc_pcie_remove(), hv_pci_remove(), and vmd_remove(). > > Then iProc would suffer from the same memory leak in > of_pci_get_host_bridge_resources() [1]. It *would* suffer from the same > domain allocation issues in of_pci_bus_find_domain_nr() -> > pci_get_new_domain_nr() [2], except that all iProc device trees (in > mainline at least) use the 'linux,pci-domain' property to avoid it. > > HyperV and VMD drivers use ACPI, which uses neither > pci_get_new_domain_nr() nor of_pci_get_host_bridge_resources(). > > > These don't have .remove: > > > > imx6_pcie_driver > > ls_pcie_driver > > armada8k_pcie_driver > > artpec6_pcie_driver > > dw_plat_pcie_driver > > hisi_pcie_driver > > hisi_pcie_almost_ecam_driver > > spear13xx_pcie_driver > > gen_pci_driver > > I think these are all technically broken. Can we fix them all at the same time as you fix Rockchip? Maybe we should have a series that adds ".suppress_bind_attrs = true" to all these drivers, including Rockchip. Then you could have this current series to make Rockchip modular on top, if there's still value in it. If we find a common problem, I'd like to fix it everywhere we know about so it doesn't get forgotten or copied to even more places. > > These don't have .remove but do set .suppress_bind_attrs = true: > > > > dra7xx_pcie_driver > > qcom_pcie_driver > > advk_pcie_driver > > mvebu_pcie_driver > > rcar_pci_driver > > rcar_pcie_driver > > tegra_pcie_driver > > altera_pcie_driver > > nwl_pcie_driver > > xilinx_pcie_driver > > Those are fine then, I suppose. > > Brian > > [1] PCI: return resource_entry in pci_add_resource helpers > https://patchwork.kernel.org/patch/9642229/ > of/pci: Fix memory leak in of_pci_get_host_bridge_resources > https://patchwork.kernel.org/patch/9642231/ > > [2] PCI: use IDA to manage domain number if not getting it from DT > https://patchwork.kernel.org/patch/9638353/
Hi Bjorn, On Thu, Mar 30, 2017 at 06:28:25PM -0500, Bjorn Helgaas wrote: > On Fri, Mar 24, 2017 at 10:22:19AM -0700, Brian Norris wrote: > > On Fri, Mar 24, 2017 at 09:25:41AM -0500, Bjorn Helgaas wrote: > > > These don't have .remove: > > > > > > imx6_pcie_driver > > > ls_pcie_driver > > > armada8k_pcie_driver > > > artpec6_pcie_driver > > > dw_plat_pcie_driver > > > hisi_pcie_driver > > > hisi_pcie_almost_ecam_driver > > > spear13xx_pcie_driver > > > gen_pci_driver > > > > I think these are all technically broken. > > Can we fix them all at the same time as you fix Rockchip? Maybe we > should have a series that adds ".suppress_bind_attrs = true" to all > these drivers, Sure, I can do that. > including Rockchip. Huh? Why? So I can revert that in the next patch? > Then you could have this current > series to make Rockchip modular on top, if there's still value in it. I do see value in it. That's the whole reason I wrote this patchset. It's useful for stressing out certain behaviors that will happen all the time (i.e., boot-time initialization, from platform probe, to bus init, to client/EP init), via repeated bind/unbind (or modprobe/rmmod). It's much faster than reboot testing. Personally, I'd rather just patch the other drivers, and you can wait until I follow through on that promise before applying my existing work for the Rockchip driver, if that's what you'd prefer. > If we find a common problem, I'd like to fix it everywhere we know > about so it doesn't get forgotten or copied to even more places. Sure. But you only just pointed out how broken several drivers were; I didn't really notice :) Brian
On Thu, Mar 30, 2017 at 05:26:09PM -0700, Brian Norris wrote: > Hi Bjorn, > > On Thu, Mar 30, 2017 at 06:28:25PM -0500, Bjorn Helgaas wrote: > > On Fri, Mar 24, 2017 at 10:22:19AM -0700, Brian Norris wrote: > > > On Fri, Mar 24, 2017 at 09:25:41AM -0500, Bjorn Helgaas wrote: > > > > These don't have .remove: > > > > > > > > imx6_pcie_driver > > > > ls_pcie_driver > > > > armada8k_pcie_driver > > > > artpec6_pcie_driver > > > > dw_plat_pcie_driver > > > > hisi_pcie_driver > > > > hisi_pcie_almost_ecam_driver > > > > spear13xx_pcie_driver > > > > gen_pci_driver > > > > > > I think these are all technically broken. > > > > Can we fix them all at the same time as you fix Rockchip? Maybe we > > should have a series that adds ".suppress_bind_attrs = true" to all > > these drivers, > > Sure, I can do that. > > > including Rockchip. > > Huh? Why? So I can revert that in the next patch? > > > Then you could have this current > > series to make Rockchip modular on top, if there's still value in it. > > I do see value in it. That's the whole reason I wrote this patchset. > It's useful for stressing out certain behaviors that will happen all the > time (i.e., boot-time initialization, from platform probe, to bus init, > to client/EP init), via repeated bind/unbind (or modprobe/rmmod). It's > much faster than reboot testing. I didn't phrase that very well. There's certainly value in stressing the bind/unbind paths, but I thought the primary reason you wrote this was to fix the fact that you could crash the system like this: # echo f8000000.pcie > /sys/bus/platform/drivers/rockchip-pcie/unbind # lspci From my point of view, that's the issue that *has* to be fixed. Better test coverage is icing. It sounds like several drivers have that same issue, and the simplest possible fix is to set .suppress_bind_attrs, so I suggested doing that so it's easy to analyze the tree as a whole and say "these drivers all have the same problem, and all the fixes look the same." I guess if you'd rather skip that for Rockchip and apply a more complicated fix there, I could go along with that. But I don't think it would hurt anything to set .suppress_bind_attrs, then remove it when you add module support. The concepts of .suppress_bind_attrs and modularity are related, and doing this in a separate patch would make it a nice example to follow if somebody wants to make other drivers modular as well. > Personally, I'd rather just patch the other drivers, and you can wait > until I follow through on that promise before applying my existing work > for the Rockchip driver, if that's what you'd prefer. It's not so much a question of using the Rockchip change as a stick. I'm just thinking that it makes a more logical progression to fix the more important issue globally first. > > If we find a common problem, I'd like to fix it everywhere we know > > about so it doesn't get forgotten or copied to even more places. > > Sure. But you only just pointed out how broken several drivers were; I > didn't really notice :) Yeah, you're right, I had in my head the idea that if we've identified the same problem in several drivers, we should fix them all, but I neglected to turn that into words. Bjorn
Hi Bjorn, On Fri, Mar 31, 2017 at 12:17:02AM -0500, Bjorn Helgaas wrote: > On Thu, Mar 30, 2017 at 05:26:09PM -0700, Brian Norris wrote: > > On Thu, Mar 30, 2017 at 06:28:25PM -0500, Bjorn Helgaas wrote: > > > Can we fix them all at the same time as you fix Rockchip? Maybe we > > > should have a series that adds ".suppress_bind_attrs = true" to all > > > these drivers, > > > > Sure, I can do that. > > > > > including Rockchip. > > > > Huh? Why? So I can revert that in the next patch? > > > > > Then you could have this current > > > series to make Rockchip modular on top, if there's still value in it. > > > > I do see value in it. That's the whole reason I wrote this patchset. > > It's useful for stressing out certain behaviors that will happen all the > > time (i.e., boot-time initialization, from platform probe, to bus init, > > to client/EP init), via repeated bind/unbind (or modprobe/rmmod). It's > > much faster than reboot testing. > > I didn't phrase that very well. There's certainly value in stressing > the bind/unbind paths, but I thought the primary reason you wrote this > was to fix the fact that you could crash the system like this: > > # echo f8000000.pcie > /sys/bus/platform/drivers/rockchip-pcie/unbind > # lspci Well, they're kinda two sides of the same coin; I was wanting to test the bind path, and when I tried this, I noticed that I could trivially crash the system. The crash seemed like a more important thing to document (because otherwise, it just looks like I'm adding a feature). > From my point of view, that's the issue that *has* to be fixed. > Better test coverage is icing. I didn't really view messing with /sys/.../unbind as a big issue, outside of development and testing (there's a lot of damage a malicious actor can do with unconstrained access to /sys/), so I guess I didn't put that aspect as super-high priority. If you'd like to prioritize that, then I'm OK with that. > It sounds like several drivers have that same issue, and the simplest > possible fix is to set .suppress_bind_attrs, so I suggested doing that > so it's easy to analyze the tree as a whole and say "these drivers > all have the same problem, and all the fixes look the same." Sure, that is the simplest approach. > I guess if you'd rather skip that for Rockchip and apply a more > complicated fix there, I could go along with that. But I don't think > it would hurt anything to set .suppress_bind_attrs, then remove it > when you add module support. The concepts of .suppress_bind_attrs and > modularity are related, and doing this in a separate patch would make > it a nice example to follow if somebody wants to make other drivers > modular as well. I'll leave that up to you, and I can resubmit things if desired. As you have since noticed, I already sent a patch to add .suppress_bind_attrs to all the other drivers. If you'd like, feel free to add pcie-rockchip.c into that mix, it's not hard -- or I can redo it myself. Then I can modify and resend (or you can do the trivial modification required to) the current patch set. Just let me know. > > Personally, I'd rather just patch the other drivers, and you can wait > > until I follow through on that promise before applying my existing work > > for the Rockchip driver, if that's what you'd prefer. > > It's not so much a question of using the Rockchip change as a stick. > I'm just thinking that it makes a more logical progression to fix the > more important issue globally first. Sure, I can grok that. Just let me know if you want any more action from me. Brian
Hi Bjorn, On Fri, Mar 31, 2017 at 09:40:15AM -0700, Brian Norris wrote: > Sure, I can grok that. Just let me know if you want any more action from > me. Any thoughts here? Would you like me to prepare my patches any differently? Brian
diff --git a/drivers/pci/host/pcie-rockchip.c b/drivers/pci/host/pcie-rockchip.c index 5d7b27b1e941..d2e5078ae331 100644 --- a/drivers/pci/host/pcie-rockchip.c +++ b/drivers/pci/host/pcie-rockchip.c @@ -223,9 +223,11 @@ struct rockchip_pcie { int link_gen; struct device *dev; struct irq_domain *irq_domain; - u32 io_size; int offset; + struct pci_bus *root_bus; + struct resource *io; phys_addr_t io_bus_addr; + u32 io_size; void __iomem *msg_region; u32 mem_size; phys_addr_t msg_bus_addr; @@ -1360,6 +1362,7 @@ static int rockchip_pcie_probe(struct platform_device *pdev) err, io); continue; } + rockchip->io = io; break; case IORESOURCE_MEM: mem = win->res; @@ -1391,6 +1394,7 @@ static int rockchip_pcie_probe(struct platform_device *pdev) err = -ENOMEM; goto err_free_res; } + rockchip->root_bus = bus; pci_bus_size_bridges(bus); pci_bus_assign_resources(bus); @@ -1421,6 +1425,34 @@ static int rockchip_pcie_probe(struct platform_device *pdev) return err; } +static int rockchip_pcie_remove(struct platform_device *pdev) +{ + struct device *dev = &pdev->dev; + struct rockchip_pcie *rockchip = dev_get_drvdata(dev); + + pci_stop_root_bus(rockchip->root_bus); + pci_remove_root_bus(rockchip->root_bus); + pci_unmap_iospace(rockchip->io); + irq_domain_remove(rockchip->irq_domain); + + phy_power_off(rockchip->phy); + phy_exit(rockchip->phy); + + clk_disable_unprepare(rockchip->clk_pcie_pm); + clk_disable_unprepare(rockchip->hclk_pcie); + clk_disable_unprepare(rockchip->aclk_perf_pcie); + clk_disable_unprepare(rockchip->aclk_pcie); + + if (!IS_ERR(rockchip->vpcie3v3)) + regulator_disable(rockchip->vpcie3v3); + if (!IS_ERR(rockchip->vpcie1v8)) + regulator_disable(rockchip->vpcie1v8); + if (!IS_ERR(rockchip->vpcie0v9)) + regulator_disable(rockchip->vpcie0v9); + + return 0; +} + static const struct dev_pm_ops rockchip_pcie_pm_ops = { SET_NOIRQ_SYSTEM_SLEEP_PM_OPS(rockchip_pcie_suspend_noirq, rockchip_pcie_resume_noirq) @@ -1438,6 +1470,6 @@ static struct platform_driver rockchip_pcie_driver = { .pm = &rockchip_pcie_pm_ops, }, .probe = rockchip_pcie_probe, - + .remove = rockchip_pcie_remove, }; builtin_platform_driver(rockchip_pcie_driver);
Currently, if we try to unbind the platform device, the remove will succeed, but the removal won't undo most of the registration, leaving partially-configured PCI devices in the system. This allows, for example, a simple 'lspci' to crash the system, as it will try to touch the freed (via devm_*) driver structures. So let's implement device remove(). Signed-off-by: Brian Norris <briannorris@chromium.org> --- v2: * unmap IO space with pci_unmap_iospace() * remove IRQ domain --- drivers/pci/host/pcie-rockchip.c | 36 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++-- 1 file changed, 34 insertions(+), 2 deletions(-)