On Thu, Apr 11, 2013 at 4:06 PM, Bjørn Mork <bj...@mork.no> wrote:
> Oliver Neukum <oli...@neukum.org> writes:
>
> My immediate thought was that someone also might want to use this new
> API from atomic context, e.g. calling it directly from an URB callback.

I am wondering it is a valid use case, and if there is one URB submitted,
the interrupt URB for status has been submitted already, hasn't it?

> But that is of course not possible taking a mutex.  Could the lock
> preventing interrupt_count maybe be a spinlock instead?  Or am I on the
> completely wrong track here?

Also it is a bit odd that the 'start' API is allowed in atomic context, but
the 'stop' API isn't allowed, and it is very easy to cause unbalanced counter.

>
> In any case, I don't see the point unnecessarily limiting the API by
> dropping the memflags.  What possible problem would that solve?

If you think 'start' API should be called in atomic context, the memflags
should be always 'GFP_ATOMIC'. I let Oliver explain why GFP_NOIO
is needed in other cases.

Thanks
-- 
Ming Lei
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