[PATCH 08/25] Staging: hv: vmbus_driver cannot be unloaded; cleanup accordingly

KY Srinivasan kys at microsoft.com
Wed Apr 27 02:31:18 UTC 2011



> -----Original Message-----
> From: Greg KH [mailto:greg at kroah.com]
> Sent: Tuesday, April 26, 2011 6:46 PM
> To: KY Srinivasan
> Cc: gregkh at suse.de; linux-kernel at vger.kernel.org;
> devel at linuxdriverproject.org; virtualization at lists.osdl.org; Haiyang Zhang;
> Abhishek Kane (Mindtree Consulting PVT LTD)
> Subject: Re: [PATCH 08/25] Staging: hv: vmbus_driver cannot be unloaded;
> cleanup accordingly
> 
> On Tue, Apr 26, 2011 at 09:20:25AM -0700, K. Y. Srinivasan wrote:
> > The vmbus driver cannot be unloaded; the windows host does not
> > permit this. Cleanup accordingly.
> 
> Woah, you just prevented this driver from ever being able to be
> unloaded.

It was never unloadable; while the driver defined an exit routine, 
there were couple of issues unloading the vmbus driver:
 
1) All guest resources given to the host could not be recovered.

2) Windows host would not permit reloading the driver without 
rebooting the guest.

All I did was acknowledge the current state and cleanup 
accordingly. This is not unique to Hyper-V; for what it is worth,
the Xen platform_pci  driver which is equivalent to the vmbus driver
is also not unlodable (the last time I checked).

> 
> That's not a "cleanup" that's a major change in how things work.  I'm
> sure, if you want to continue down this line, there are more things you
> can remove from the code, right?
> 
> What is the real issue here?  What happens if you unload the bus?  What
> goes wrong?  Can it be fixed?

This needs to be fixed on the host side. I have notified them of the issue. 

> 
> This is a pretty big commitment...

These drivers only load when Linux is hosted on  a Hyper-V platform;
I am not sure why it is a "big commitment" given that the host does not 
permit reloading this driver without rebooting the guest. 

Regards,

K. Y




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