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authorJisheng Zhang <jszhang@marvell.com>2016-11-10 17:21:29 +0800
committerMark Brown <broonie@kernel.org>2016-11-11 15:38:08 +0000
commit09f2ba0b0b7c44ecea49cf69a708203b76ba5535 (patch)
tree042df33ac99f77d8b86ac427431e267c33561c35 /sound/usb/6fire/chip.c
parent1001354ca34179f3db924eb66672442a173147dc (diff)
regulator: gpio: properly check return value of of_get_named_gpio
The function of_get_named_gpio() could return -ENOENT, -EPROBE_DEFER -EINVAL and so on. Currently, for the optional property "enable-gpio", we only check -EPROBE_DEFER, this is not enough since there may be misconfigured "enable-gpio" in the DTB, of_get_named_gpio() will return -EINVAL in this case, we should return immediately here. And for the optional property "gpios", we didn't check the return value, the driver will continue to the point where gpio_request_array() is called, it doesn't make sense to continue if we got -EPROBE_DEFER or -EINVAL here. This patch tries to address these two issues by properly checking the return value of of_get_named_gpio. Signed-off-by: Jisheng Zhang <jszhang@marvell.com> Signed-off-by: Mark Brown <broonie@kernel.org>
Diffstat (limited to 'sound/usb/6fire/chip.c')
th LL/SC, this would be trivial to fix with a new primitive that clears one bit and tests another atomically, but that ends up not working on x86, where the only atomic operations that return the result end up being cmpxchg and xadd. The atomic bit operations return the old value of the same bit we changed, not the value of an unrelated bit. On x86, we could put the lock bit in the high bit of the byte, and use "xadd" with that bit (where the overflow ends up not touching other bits), and look at the other bits of the result. However, an even simpler model is to just use a regular atomic "and" to clear the lock bit, and then the sign bit in eflags will indicate the resulting state of the unrelated bit #7. So by moving the PageWaiters bit up to bit #7, we can atomically clear the lock bit and test the waiters bit on x86 too. And architectures with LL/SC (which is all the usual RISC suspects), the particular bit doesn't matter, so they are fine with this approach too. This avoids the extra access to the same atomic word, and thus avoids the costly stall at page unlock time. The only downside is that the interface ends up being a bit odd and specialized: clear a bit in a byte, and test the sign bit. Nick doesn't love the resulting name of the new primitive, but I'd rather make the name be descriptive and very clear about the limitation imposed by trying to work across all relevant architectures than make it be some generic thing that doesn't make the odd semantics explicit. So this introduces the new architecture primitive clear_bit_unlock_is_negative_byte(); and adds the trivial implementation for x86. We have a generic non-optimized fallback (that just does a "clear_bit()"+"test_bit(7)" combination) which can be overridden by any architecture that can do better. According to Nick, Power has the same hickup x86 has, for example, but some other architectures may not even care. All these optimizations mean that my page locking stress-test (which is just executing a lot of small short-lived shell scripts: "make test" in the git source tree) no longer makes our page locking look horribly bad. Before all these optimizations, just the unlock_page() costs were just over 3% of all CPU overhead on "make test". After this, it's down to 0.66%, so just a quarter of the cost it used to be. (The difference on NUMA is bigger, but there this micro-optimization is likely less noticeable, since the big issue on NUMA was not the accesses to 'struct page', but the waitqueue accesses that were already removed by Nick's earlier commit). Acked-by: Nick Piggin <npiggin@gmail.com> Cc: Dave Hansen <dave.hansen@linux.intel.com> Cc: Bob Peterson <rpeterso@redhat.com> Cc: Steven Whitehouse <swhiteho@redhat.com> Cc: Andrew Lutomirski <luto@kernel.org> Cc: Andreas Gruenbacher <agruenba@redhat.com> Cc: Peter Zijlstra <peterz@infradead.org> Cc: Mel Gorman <mgorman@techsingularity.net> Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@linux-foundation.org>
Diffstat (limited to 'sound/firewire/tascam')