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Re: [Qemu-arm] [PATCH v3 01/33] Create Resettable QOM interface


From: Damien Hedde
Subject: Re: [Qemu-arm] [PATCH v3 01/33] Create Resettable QOM interface
Date: Tue, 30 Jul 2019 16:08:59 +0200
User-agent: Mozilla/5.0 (X11; Linux x86_64; rv:60.0) Gecko/20100101 Thunderbird/60.7.1

On 7/30/19 3:59 PM, Peter Maydell wrote:
> On Tue, 30 Jul 2019 at 14:56, Cornelia Huck <address@hidden> wrote:
>>
>> On Tue, 30 Jul 2019 14:44:21 +0100
>> Peter Maydell <address@hidden> wrote:
>>
>>> On Tue, 30 Jul 2019 at 14:42, Cornelia Huck <address@hidden> wrote:
>>>> I'm having a hard time figuring out what a 'cold' or a 'warm' reset is
>>>> supposed to be... can you add a definition/guideline somewhere?
>>>
>>> Generally "cold" reset is "power on" and "warm" is "we were already
>>> powered-on, but somebody flipped a reset line somewhere".
>>
>> Ok, that makes sense... my main concern is to distinguish that in a
>> generic way, as it is a generic interface. What about adding something
>> like:
>>
>> "A 'cold' reset means that the object to be reset is initially reset; a 
>> 'warm'
>> reset means that the object to be reset has already been initialized."
>>
>> Or is that again too generic?
> 
> I think it doesn't quite capture the idea -- an object can have already
> been reset and then get a 'cold' reset: this is like having a powered-on
> machine and then power-cycling it.
> 
> The 'warm' reset is the vaguer one, because the specific behaviour
> is somewhat device-dependent (many devices might not have any
> difference from 'cold' reset, for those that do the exact detail
> of what doesn't get reset on warm-reset will vary). But every
> device should have some kind of "as if you power-cycled it" (or
> for QEMU, "go back to the same state as if you just started QEMU on the
> command line"). Our current "reset" method is really cold-reset.
> 

Exactly. In the following patches, I've tried to replace existing reset
calls by cold or warm reset depending on whether:
+ it is called through the main system reset -> cold
+ it is called during normal life-time       -> warm

But I definitely can add some docs/comments to better explain that.

--
Damien



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