• Rafael J. Wysocki's avatar
    driver core: Remove device link creation limitation · 515db266
    Rafael J. Wysocki authored
    If device_link_add() is called for a consumer/supplier pair with an
    existing device link between them and the existing link's type is
    not in agreement with the flags passed to that function by its
    caller, NULL will be returned.  That is seriously inconvenient,
    because it forces the callers of device_link_add() to worry about
    what others may or may not do even if that is not relevant to them
    for any other reasons.
    
    It turns out, however, that this limitation can be made go away
    relatively easily.
    
    The underlying observation is that if DL_FLAG_STATELESS has been
    passed to device_link_add() in flags for the given consumer/supplier
    pair at least once, calling either device_link_del() or
    device_link_remove() to release the link returned by it should work,
    but there are no other requirements associated with that flag.  In
    turn, if at least one of the callers of device_link_add() for the
    given consumer/supplier pair has not passed DL_FLAG_STATELESS to it
    in flags, the driver core should track the status of the link and act
    on it as appropriate (ie. the link should be treated as "managed").
    This means that DL_FLAG_STATELESS needs to be set for managed device
    links and it should be valid to call device_link_del() or
    device_link_remove() to drop references to them in certain
    sutiations.
    
    To allow that to happen, introduce a new (internal) device link flag
    called DL_FLAG_MANAGED and make device_link_add() set it automatically
    whenever DL_FLAG_STATELESS is not passed to it.  Also make it take
    additional references to existing device links that were previously
    stateless (that is, with DL_FLAG_STATELESS set and DL_FLAG_MANAGED
    unset) and will need to be managed going forward and initialize
    their status (which has been DL_STATE_NONE so far).
    
    Accordingly, when a managed device link is dropped automatically
    by the driver core, make it clear DL_FLAG_MANAGED, reset the link's
    status back to DL_STATE_NONE and drop the reference to it associated
    with DL_FLAG_MANAGED instead of just deleting it right away (to
    allow it to stay around in case it still needs to be released
    explicitly by someone).
    
    With that, since setting DL_FLAG_STATELESS doesn't mean that the
    device link in question is not managed any more, replace all of the
    status-tracking checks against DL_FLAG_STATELESS with analogous
    checks against DL_FLAG_MANAGED and update the documentation to
    reflect these changes.
    
    While at it, make device_link_add() reject flags that it does not
    recognize, including DL_FLAG_MANAGED.
    Signed-off-by: default avatarRafael J. Wysocki <rafael.j.wysocki@intel.com>
    Reviewed-by: default avatarSaravana Kannan <saravanak@google.com>
    Tested-by: default avatarMarek Szyprowski <m.szyprowski@samsung.com>
    Review-by: default avatarSaravana Kannan <saravanak@google.com>
    Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/2305283.AStDPdUUnE@kreacherSigned-off-by: default avatarGreg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@linuxfoundation.org>
    515db266
core.c 89.2 KB