[PATCH v3 2/2] drm: bridge/dw_hdmi: add dw hdmi i2c bus adapter support

Russell King - ARM Linux linux at arm.linux.org.uk
Thu Sep 3 02:19:00 PDT 2015


On Wed, Sep 02, 2015 at 04:43:38PM -0700, Doug Anderson wrote:
> Russell,
> 
> On Wed, Sep 2, 2015 at 3:50 PM, Russell King - ARM Linux
> <linux at arm.linux.org.uk> wrote:
> > Never copy the of_node from one device to another.  That allows the
> > bus matching to unintentionally match the of_node against the wrong
> > driver.
> 
> Can you be more specific about what problems you'd expect.  It seems
> like a terribly common practice to do this, but maybe I'm
> misunderstanding:

The problem with copying an of_node from one struct device to another
struct device is of_match_device().

Devices in a DT setup are bound to drivers using dev->of_node - when a
new device or driver is registered onto a bus, the new object is matched
against all un-bound objects (devices or drivers as appropriate)
comparing the compatible string gained from dev->of_node against the
list of of_device_id strings provided by the driver.

When a match is found, the two are attempted to be bound together.

Consider what happens when you have a platform device with an of_node,
and you bind that to a driver matched via the compatible string.  The
driver creates a new platform device, and copies the of_node to this
new device so the new device can have access to the properties of the
of_node.

What happens next?  Does the new device bind to the same driver (and
thus we enter an infinite loop) or does it bind to some other driver
as the author originally hoped?  Depends whether the other driver is
earlier in the list of drivers or later, whether it's in the kernel
or not.

It's less of a problem when you copy the of_node between two different
buses, because they won't match the same driver, but this is a dangerous
act - if stuff copies it in one direction, what's to stop someone copying
it back to a new device on the original bus.  As soon as that happens,
things can go awol.

It would be a good idea if either:
1) this never happened
or
2) we had a flag which said "ignore the of_node for driver matching"

And yes, we do have drivers which do exactly what I said above.  They
work through luck rather than design.

-- 
FTTC broadband for 0.8mile line: currently at 9.6Mbps down 400kbps up
according to speedtest.net.


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