From: Ulf Hansson <ulf.hansson@stericsson.com>
To: Adrian Hunter <adrian.hunter@intel.com>
Cc: "linux-mmc@vger.kernel.org" <linux-mmc@vger.kernel.org>,
Chris Ball <cjb@laptop.org>,
Per FORLIN <per.forlin@stericsson.com>,
Johan RUDHOLM <johan.rudholm@stericsson.com>,
Lee Jones <lee.jones@linaro.org>
Subject: Re: [PATCH] mmc: core: Force a "detect" to handle non-properly removed cards
Date: Fri, 13 Jan 2012 11:04:06 +0100 [thread overview]
Message-ID: <4F100196.8010104@stericsson.com> (raw)
In-Reply-To: <4F0C2ACD.4090002@intel.com>
Adrian Hunter wrote:
> On 10/01/12 12:59, Ulf Hansson wrote:
>> Adrian Hunter wrote:
>>> On 09/01/12 16:27, Ulf Hansson wrote:
>>>> Adrian Hunter wrote:
>>>>> On 09/01/12 15:14, Ulf Hansson wrote:
>>>>>>>> My concern is more about what we actually can trust; either the GPIO irq
>>>>>>>> which likely is giving more than one irq when inserting/removing a card
>>>>>>>> since the slot is probably not glitch free, or that a "rescan" runs to
>>>>>>>> make
>>>>>>>> sure a CMD13 is accepted from the previously inserted card.
>>>>>>> Yes, I guess you would need to debounce the GPIO if you wanted to rely
>>>>>>> on it.
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>> Moreover, the issue this patch tries to solve can not be solved without
>>>>>>>> doing a "rescan" which must be triggered from the the block layer some
>>>>>>>> how.
>>>>>>>> I thought this new function that you previously added
>>>>>>>> "mmc_detect_card_remove" was the proper place to do this.
>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>> Let the mmc_detect_card_removed function trigger a new detect
>>>>>>>>>> work immediately when it discovers that a card has been removed.
>>>>>>>>> This is changing some long-standing functionality i.e. the card is not
>>>>>>>>> removed
>>>>>>>>> without a card detect event. It is difficult to know whether that
>>>>>>>>> will be
>>>>>>>>> very
>>>>>>>>> bad for poor quality cards,
>>>>>>>> Doing a mmc_detect (rescan) will in the end just issue a CMD13 to the
>>>>>>>> card
>>>>>>>> to make sure it is still present, that is already done from the block
>>>>>>>> layer
>>>>>>>> after each read/write request. So I can not see that "poor quality
>>>>>>>> cards"
>>>>>>>> will have any further problem with this patch, but I might miss
>>>>>>>> something!?
>>>>>>> The block driver has never caused a card to be removed before. That
>>>>>>> is new
>>>>>>> and it is designed to preserve existing behaviour i.e. do not remove a
>>>>>>> card
>>>>>>> without a card detect event.
>>>>>> True, but is this a problem!?
>>>>> Better not to find out.
>>>> :-)
>>>>
>>>> Then there is lot of other things around mmc we also should not change.
>>> Can you give an example of a change in existing functionality? Isn't
>>> everything either a bug fix or new functionality?
>>>
>>>>>> Anyway, this is the actual issue this patch is trying to solve. If you
>>>>>> remove a card "slowly", a "rescan" work, which the GPIO irq has
>>>>>> triggered to
>>>>>> run will run the CMD13 to verify that the card is still there. Since it
>>>>>> has
>>>>>> not completely been removed the CMD13 will succeed and the card will
>>>>>> not be
>>>>>> removed.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> Moreover every other new block request will soon start to fail and always
>>>>>> do; until a new rescan is triggered (which is when you insert a new
>>>>>> card or
>>>>>> do a suspend-resume cycle). In practice I think it is more preferred that
>>>>>> the card gets removed and it's corresponding block device.
>>>>> There are other ways to solve that problem. Apart from my previous
>>>>> suggestion, there is also the possibility to make use of ->get_cd
>>>>> instead of CMD13, someone already posted a patch for that
>>>>> "[PATCH 2/4 v4] MMC/SD: Add callback function to detect card"
>>>>> but it should probably be selected on a per driver basis (i.e. add a
>>>>> MMC_CAP2 for it). I guess you would still need to debounce the GPIO
>>>>> though.
>>>>>
>>>> Unfortunately that wont help to solve this issue either. That patch will
>>>> only prevent you from executing a CMD13 if the get_cd function says the card
>>>> is still there. I kind of micro optimization I think, unless you very often
>>>> encounters errors in the block layer.
>>> No, the rescan calls that code, so if get_cd() returns 0 the card will be
>>> removed irrespective of whether it has been pulled out slowly or not.
>> That is not correct. The rescan uses the get_cd function to find out if
>> it really make sense to try to initialize a new card. It is not used for
>> removing existing cards.
>
> mmc_rescan() first calls host->bus_ops->detect() to see if the card is still
> there. If the card does not respond then it is removed. Then mmc_rescan
> attempts to initialize a new card. host->bus_ops->detect() is not used for that.
>
>> You were referring to "[PATCH 2/4 v4] MMC/SD: Add callback function to
>> detect card". This patch will prevent the bus_ops->alive function to be
>> called if the get_cd function indicates that the card is still there. I
>> can not see how this on it's own will help out to solve the issue my
>> patch is trying to solve.
>
> Yes it will because it is called by mmc_rescan() and used to remove the card
> via host->bus_ops->detect()
>
In principles this means the following sequence:
We will rely on that the get_cd function will return 0 (indicating card
is removed) when the card is "slowly" removed at the point when the
rescan function is calling it through the bus_ops->detect -->
_mmc_detect_card_removed function.
This then becomes a race, meaning that the rescan function must be
executing at the same time the get_cd function will returns 0. Otherwise
the rescan function will not remove the card.
Thus my conclusion is that "[PATCH 2/4 v4] MMC/SD: Add callback function
to detect card" will likely improve behavior but is not the safe
solution to handle "slowly" removed cards.
Again, to be sure, we must let the mmc_detect_card_remove function
trigger a rescan when _mmc_detect_card_removed has detected that the
card is removed. This should be safe in all circumstances.
>>>> The key in this patch is that a rescan work is triggered to fully verify
>>>> that the card is still there and if not, it can remove it. I don't think
>>>> this is such a big matter, but of course this is my own opinion. :-)
>>> Another issue with your patch is that the card will not be removed unless
>>> there is subsequent I/O to cause an I/O error and subsequent rescan.
>>>
>> This is exactly the problem this patch is trying to solve. Instead of
>> "forever" keeping the card inserted and thus returning errors for every
>> new I/O request, we trigger a rescan to fully remove the card.
>
> If the user pulls out the card slowly so that the rescan sees the card still
> there, then if there is no I/O there will be no I/O error and the kernel
> will not remove the card - until the user sticks in another card or tries to
> access files that are not there.
>
Br
Ulf Hansson
next prev parent reply other threads:[~2012-01-13 10:04 UTC|newest]
Thread overview: 24+ messages / expand[flat|nested] mbox.gz Atom feed top
2012-01-03 10:33 [PATCH] mmc: core: Force a "detect" to handle non-properly removed cards Ulf Hansson
2012-01-04 9:40 ` Linus Walleij
2012-01-04 21:26 ` Adrian Hunter
2012-01-09 11:02 ` Ulf Hansson
2012-01-09 12:07 ` Adrian Hunter
2012-01-09 13:14 ` Ulf Hansson
2012-01-09 13:53 ` Adrian Hunter
2012-01-09 14:27 ` Ulf Hansson
2012-01-10 9:22 ` Adrian Hunter
2012-01-10 10:59 ` Ulf Hansson
2012-01-10 12:10 ` Adrian Hunter
2012-01-13 10:04 ` Ulf Hansson [this message]
2012-01-13 10:43 ` Adrian Hunter
2012-01-13 11:31 ` Ulf Hansson
2012-01-13 12:08 ` Adrian Hunter
2012-01-13 13:14 ` Ulf Hansson
2012-01-13 13:43 ` Adrian Hunter
2012-01-13 14:35 ` Ulf Hansson
2012-01-16 7:45 ` Adrian Hunter
2012-01-16 11:09 ` Ulf Hansson
2012-01-10 9:33 ` Adrian Hunter
2012-01-10 11:03 ` Ulf Hansson
2012-01-10 12:21 ` Adrian Hunter
2012-01-09 14:34 ` Ulf Hansson
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