On Fri, May 10, 2024 at 07:12:14PM +0100, Matthew Auld wrote:
> Hopefully make it clearer when to use devm vs drmm.
> 
> Signed-off-by: Matthew Auld <matthew.a...@intel.com>
> Cc: Daniel Vetter <daniel.vet...@ffwll.ch>
> Cc: dri-devel@lists.freedesktop.org
> ---
>  drivers/gpu/drm/drm_managed.c | 42 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
>  1 file changed, 42 insertions(+)
> 
> diff --git a/drivers/gpu/drm/drm_managed.c b/drivers/gpu/drm/drm_managed.c
> index 7646f67bda4e..20d705bbc0a3 100644
> --- a/drivers/gpu/drm/drm_managed.c
> +++ b/drivers/gpu/drm/drm_managed.c
> @@ -34,6 +34,48 @@
>   * during the lifetime of the driver, all the functions are fully concurrent
>   * safe. But it is recommended to use managed resources only for resources 
> that
>   * change rarely, if ever, during the lifetime of the &drm_device instance.
> + *
> + * Note that the distinction between devm and drmm is important to get right.
> + * Consider some hotunplug scenarios, where it is valid for there to be 
> multiple
> + * unplugged struct &drm_device instances each being kept alive by an open
> + * driver fd. The driver needs a clean separation between what needs to 
> happen
> + * when the struct &device is removed and what needs to happen when a given
> + * struct &drm_device instance is released, as well as in some cases a more
> + * finer grained marking of critical sections that require hardware 
> interaction.
> + * See below.
> + *
> + * devm
> + * ~~~~
> + * In general use devm for cleaning up anything hardware related. So removing
> + * pci mmaps, releasing interrupt handlers, basically anything hw related.  
> The
                                                                              ^
Extra space.

> + * devm release actions are called when the struct &device is removed, 
> shortly
> + * after calling into the drivers struct &pci_driver.remove() callback, if 
> this
> + * is a pci device.
> + *
> + * devm can be thought of as an alternative to putting all the hw related

nit: perhaps s/thought/seen ?

> + * cleanup directly in the struct &pci_driver.remove() callback, where the
> + * correct ordering of the unwind steps needs to be manually done in the 
> error
> + * path of the struct &pci_driver.probe() and again on the remove side.  With
> + * devm this is all done automatically.
> + *
> + * drmm
> + * ~~~~
> + * In general use this for cleaning up anything software related. So data
> + * structures and the like which are tied to the lifetime of a particular 
> struct
> + * &drm_device instance.
> + *
> + * drmm can be thought of as an alternative to putting all the software 
> related

nit: perhaps s/thought/seen ?

> + * cleanup directly in the struct &drm_driver.release() callback, where again
> + * the correct ordering of the unwind steps needs to be done manually. As 
> with
> + * devm this is instead done automatically.
> + *
> + * Sometimes there is no clean separation between software and hardware, 
> which
> + * is where drm_dev_enter() comes in. For example, a driver might have some
> + * state tied to a struct &drm_device instance, for which the same cleanup 
> path
> + * is called for both a plugged and unplugged device, and the cleanup itself
> + * might require talking to the device if it's still attached to this 
> particular
> + * struct &drm_device. For that we instead mark the device sections.  See
> + * drm_dev_enter(), drm_dev_exit() and drm_dev_unplug().

perhaps open up a bit more here?

anyway, everything looks good to me.

Sima, thoughts?

>   */
>  
>  struct drmres_node {
> -- 
> 2.45.0
> 

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