From: Stephen M. Cameron Date: Tue, 1 May 2012 16:42:09 +0000 (-0500) Subject: [SCSI] hpsa: call pci_disable_device on driver unload X-Git-Tag: v3.5-rc1~172^2~47 X-Git-Url: http://review.tizen.org/git/?a=commitdiff_plain;h=f0bd0b68220aaba354f84518173498cae160afdc;p=profile%2Fivi%2Fkernel-adaptation-intel-automotive.git [SCSI] hpsa: call pci_disable_device on driver unload As Jenx Axboe explained to me: "In earlier times (2.6.18 and pre, iirc), Linux disabled IO and mem bars on pci_disable_device(). Now in newer kernel it does not. And in the newer kernels you run into problems if you DON'T disable the device on exit, since when it later loads the device is already in the enabled state - and pci_enable_device() then does nothing. This typically screws MSI/MSI-X." This is what the big scary comment that says pci_disable_device does "something nasty" to smart arrays was evidently referring to. If pci_disable_device is not called on driver rmmod, subsequently insmod'ing the driver may in result in some cases fail to be able to receive interrupts, esp. if other drivers are loaded between unloading and loading hpsa. Signed-off-by: Stephen M. Cameron Signed-off-by: James Bottomley --- diff --git a/drivers/scsi/hpsa.c b/drivers/scsi/hpsa.c index f490474..732ae3d 100644 --- a/drivers/scsi/hpsa.c +++ b/drivers/scsi/hpsa.c @@ -3984,10 +3984,7 @@ err_out_free_res: iounmap(h->cfgtable); if (h->vaddr) iounmap(h->vaddr); - /* - * Deliberately omit pci_disable_device(): it does something nasty to - * Smart Array controllers that pci_enable_device does not undo - */ + pci_disable_device(h->pdev); pci_release_regions(h->pdev); return err; } @@ -4526,10 +4523,7 @@ static void __devexit hpsa_remove_one(struct pci_dev *pdev) kfree(h->cmd_pool_bits); kfree(h->blockFetchTable); kfree(h->hba_inquiry_data); - /* - * Deliberately omit pci_disable_device(): it does something nasty to - * Smart Array controllers that pci_enable_device does not undo - */ + pci_disable_device(pdev); pci_release_regions(pdev); pci_set_drvdata(pdev, NULL); kfree(h);