On 22/05/18 20:31, Stefan Wahren wrote:
[...]
+static int rpi_hwmon_probe(struct platform_device *pdev)
+{
+       struct device *dev = &pdev->dev;
+       struct rpi_hwmon_data *data;
+       int ret;
+
+       data = devm_kzalloc(dev, sizeof(*data), GFP_KERNEL);
+       if (!data)
+               return -ENOMEM;
+
+       data->fw = platform_get_drvdata(to_platform_device(dev->parent));
+       if (!data->fw)
+               return -EPROBE_DEFER;
+

I am a bit at loss here (and sorry I didn't bring this up before).
How would this ever be possible, given that the driver is registered
from the firmware driver ?

Do you refer to the (wrong) return code, the assumption that the parent must be 
a platform driver or a possible race?


The return code is one thing. My question was how the driver would ever be 
instantiated
with platform_get_drvdata(to_platform_device(dev->parent)) == NULL (but 
dev->parent != NULL),
so I referred to the race. But, sure, a second question would be how that would 
indicate
that the parent is not instantiated yet (which by itself seems like an odd 
question).

This shouldn't happen and worth a log error. In patch #3 the registration is 
called after the complete private data of the firmware driver is initialized. 
Did i missed something?

But i must confess that i didn't test all builtin/module combinations.

The point is that, by construction, a "raspberrypi-hwmon" device will only ever be created for this driver to bind to if the firmware device is both fully initialised and known to support the GET_THROTTLED call already. Thus trying to check those again from the hwmon driver is at best pointless, and at worst misleading. If somebody *does* manage to bind this driver to some random inappropriate device, you've still got no guarantee that dev->parent is valid or that dev_get_drvdata(dev->parent)) won't return something non-NULL that isn't a struct rpi_firmware pointer, at which point you're liable to pass the paranoid check yet still crash anyway.

IOW, you can't reasonably defend against incorrect operation, and under correct operation there's nothing to defend against, so either way it's pretty futile to waste effort trying.

Robin.
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