On Tue, Nov 17, 2020 at 10:22:20AM +0000, Claudiu Manoil wrote: > >-----Original Message----- > >From: Andrew Lunn <and...@lunn.ch> > >Sent: Tuesday, November 17, 2020 4:45 AM > >To: Claudiu Manoil <claudiu.man...@nxp.com> > >Cc: netdev@vger.kernel.org; Jakub Kicinski <k...@kernel.org>; David S . > >Miller <da...@davemloft.net>; Alexandru Marginean > ><alexandru.margin...@nxp.com>; Vladimir Oltean > ><vladimir.olt...@nxp.com> > >Subject: Re: [PATCH net] enetc: Workaround for MDIO register access issue > > > >> +static inline void enetc_lock_mdio(void) > >> +{ > >> + read_lock(&enetc_mdio_lock); > >> +} > >> + > > > >> +static inline u32 _enetc_rd_mdio_reg_wa(void __iomem *reg) > >> +{ > >> + unsigned long flags; > >> + u32 val; > >> + > >> + write_lock_irqsave(&enetc_mdio_lock, flags); > >> + val = ioread32(reg); > >> + write_unlock_irqrestore(&enetc_mdio_lock, flags); > >> + > >> + return val; > >> +} > > > >Can you mix read_lock() with write_lock_irqsave()? Normal locks you > >should not mix, so i assume read/writes also cannot be mixed? > > > > Not sure I understand your concerns, but this is the readers-writers locking > scheme. The readers (read_lock) are "lightweight", they get the most calls, > can be taken from any context including interrupt context, and compete only > with the writers (write_lock). The writers can take the lock only when there > are > no readers holding it, and the writer must insure that it doesn't get > preempted > (by interrupts etc.) when holding the lock (irqsave). The good part is that > mdio > operations are not frequent. Also, we had this code out of the tree for quite > some > time, it's well exercised.
Hi CLaidiu Thanks for the explanation. I don't think i've every reviewed a driver using read/write locks like this. But thinking it through, it does seem O.K. Andrew