On Wed, Mar 16, 2016 at 03:52:28PM +0100, Rafael J. Wysocki wrote:
> +void cpufreq_enable_fast_switch(struct cpufreq_policy *policy)
> +{
> +     mutex_lock(&cpufreq_fast_switch_lock);
> +     if (policy->fast_switch_possible && cpufreq_fast_switch_count >= 0) {
> +             cpufreq_fast_switch_count++;
> +             policy->fast_switch_enabled = true;
> +     } else {
> +             pr_warn("cpufreq: CPU%u: Fast freqnency switching not 
> enabled\n",
> +                     policy->cpu);

This happens because there's transition notifiers, right? Would it make
sense to iterate the notifier here and print the notifier function
symbol for each? That way we've got a clue as to where to start looking
when this happens.

> +     }
> +     mutex_unlock(&cpufreq_fast_switch_lock);
> +}

> @@ -1653,8 +1703,18 @@ int cpufreq_register_notifier(struct not
>  
>       switch (list) {
>       case CPUFREQ_TRANSITION_NOTIFIER:
> +             mutex_lock(&cpufreq_fast_switch_lock);
> +
> +             if (cpufreq_fast_switch_count > 0) {
> +                     mutex_unlock(&cpufreq_fast_switch_lock);

So while theoretically (it has a return code)
cpufreq_register_notifier() could fail, it never actually did. Now we
do. Do we want to add a WARN here?

> +                     return -EPERM;
> +             }
>               ret = srcu_notifier_chain_register(
>                               &cpufreq_transition_notifier_list, nb);
> +             if (!ret)
> +                     cpufreq_fast_switch_count--;
> +
> +             mutex_unlock(&cpufreq_fast_switch_lock);
>               break;
>       case CPUFREQ_POLICY_NOTIFIER:
>               ret = blocking_notifier_chain_register(

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