Thread (9 messages) 9 messages, 6 authors, 2017-03-20

[PATCH] serial: 8250: 8250_core: Fix irq name for 8250 serial irq

From: linux@armlinux.org.uk (Russell King - ARM Linux)
Date: 2017-03-20 12:34:55
Also in: linux-serial, lkml

On Thu, Mar 16, 2017 at 10:58:54PM +0200, Andy Shevchenko wrote:
On Thu, Mar 16, 2017 at 4:55 PM, Robin Murphy [off-list ref] wrote:
quoted
On 16/03/17 13:36, Russell King - ARM Linux wrote:
quoted
On Thu, Mar 16, 2017 at 05:56:53PM +0530, Vignesh R wrote:
quoted
Using dev_name() as irq name during request_irq() might be misleading in
case of serial over PCI. Therefore use a better alternative name for
identifying serial port irqs as "serial" appended with serial_index of
the port. This ensures that "serial" string is always present in irq
name while port index will help in distinguishing b/w different ports.
Wouldn't it be better to use the device name (iow, ttySx) rather than
"serialx" ?

Maybe a helper function in serial_core.c to format the device name into
a supplied string, which can be re-used elsewhere, eg, uart_report_port()
and uart_suspend_port().  IOW:

const char *uart_port_name(char *buf, size_t n, struct uart_driver *drv,
                         struct uart_port *port)
{
      snprintf(buf, n, "%s%d", drv->dev_name,
               drv->tty_driver->name_base + port->line);

      return buf;
}

which means you can do this:

      char name[16];

      request_irq(..., uart_port_name(name, sizeof(name), driver, port), ...)

which also avoids the allocation.
...and makes 'cat /proc/interrupts' particularly fun later:

  8:          0          GICv2  72 Level     ? ?h       ????V!

Unless a suitably long-lived string already exists somewhere else in the
serial core, the allocation is unavoidable, although kasprintf() (or its
devm_ variant) might make matters a little simpler.
What prevents us to create a field in uart_port (uart8250_port?) where
we put the uart_port_name() for future use as long as uart_port is
alive?
Probably a good idea - I didn't check whether request_irq() just uses
the pointer to the string or takes a copy of the string (I should've
done before making the suggestion...)

-- 
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