Thread (83 messages) 83 messages, 14 authors, 2021-10-08

Re: [PATCH v2 00/12] arm64: Kconfig: Update ARCH_EXYNOS select configs

From: Will McVicker <hidden>
Date: 2021-10-01 16:51:39
Also in: linux-clk, linux-gpio, linux-rtc, linux-samsung-soc, lkml

On Fri, Oct 1, 2021 at 9:00 AM Olof Johansson [off-list ref] wrote:
On Fri, Oct 1, 2021 at 4:59 AM Geert Uytterhoeven [off-list ref] wrote:
quoted
Hi Olof,

On Fri, Oct 1, 2021 at 7:36 AM Olof Johansson [off-list ref] wrote:
quoted
A much more valuable approach would be to work towards being able to
free up memory by un-probed drivers at the end of boot. That would
possibly benefit all platforms on all architectures.
We used to have such a functionality in arch/ppc (not arch/powerpc!),
where code/data could be tagged __prep, __chrp, or __pmac, to put it
in a special section, and to be freed with initdata when unused.  It
was removed in v2.6.15[1], as the savings weren't worth the hassle.
In a more fragmented space like arm the memory lost due to alignment
of the sections would be even more substantial.
Yeah, the balance between per-platform code size and overall kernel
code size shifted over time to a point where it wasn't as meaningful
on ppc.
quoted
Another problem is to know when is the end of the boot, especially
with deferred probing.
Most of this code either has a module_init() or an initcall that
actually registers the drivers and/or probes for the platform and does
the work.

This means you can have a late equivalent hook/initcall that
determines whether this path ended up being probed/used. If it wasn't,
you can then unregister and flag the corresponding memory to be freed
at the end, and would take out the heuristics and guessing on needing
to do it automatically from the code path that's doing said freeing.


-Olof
First off, I appreciate the constructive conversations and I
understand the ask here. So I'd like to close the "we don't want this"
and "this isn't possible" conversation. We have already proven
downstream that it is in fact possible to modularize these drivers on
other SoCs (mentioned earlier if you missed it) and I'd like to direct
the conversation towards verifying/testing here instead of negatively
arguing about how SoC vendors aren't upstreaming their drivers. I
think everyone understands that, but unfortunately I have no control
over that even though I would love everyone to work upstream directly.

I am fine with forcing these drivers to always be enabled in some form
upstream even though it doesn't really make much sense for a generic
kernel that will run on Qualcomm, Exynos, Mediatek, (you name it) SoC
devices. I thought about how to do this yesterday and wasn't able to
come up with a proper solution that didn't always force this driver to
be a module when CONFIG_MODULES is enabled.

For example, if I do this below, then we will be forcing all builds to
use CONFIG_XXX as a module if they want just one driver as a module.

config XXX
  tristate "blah blah" if COMPILE_TEST
  default m if (ARCH_XXX && MODULES)
  default ARCH_XXX

The best I was able to come up with was this below which would allow
the driver to be a module or built-in; however, obviously it lets you
disable it in EXPERT mode.

config XXX
  tristate "blah blah" if COMPILE_TEST || EXPERT
  default ARCH_XXX

Let me know if you have a better solution that doesn't force the
driver to be a module when CONFIG_MODULES=y. Saravana did propose a
MINIMUM_ARM64_GENERIC_KERNEL config that could solve this, but that
too was shot down.

Thanks,
Will

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