Saturday, 1 February 2014

Linux : module_init() vs. core_initcall() vs. early_initcall()

In drivers I often see these three types of init functions being used.
module_init()
core_initcall()
early_initcall()
  1. Under what circumstances i should use them ?
  2. Also, are there any other ways of init ?
Answers;-

They determine the initialization order of built-in modules. Drivers will use device_initcall (ormodule_init; see below) most of the time. Early initialization (early_initcall) is normally used by architecture-specific code to initialize hardware subsystems (power management, DMAs, etc.) before any real driver gets initialized.

Technical stuff for understanding below

Look at init/main.c. After a few architecture-specific initialization done by code inarch/<arch>/boot and arch/<arch>/kernel, the portable start_kernel function will be called. Eventually, in the same file, do_basic_setup is called:
/*
* Ok, the machine is now initialized. None of the devices
* have been touched yet, but the CPU subsystem is up and
* running, and memory and process management works.
*
* Now we can finally start doing some real work..
*/

static void __init do_basic_setup(void)
{
cpuset_init_smp
();
usermodehelper_init
();
shmem_init
();
driver_init
();
init_irq_proc
();
do_ctors
();
usermodehelper_enable
();
do_initcalls
();
}
which ends with a call to do_initcalls:
static initcall_t *initcall_levels[] __initdata = {
__initcall0_start
,
__initcall1_start
,
__initcall2_start
,
__initcall3_start
,
__initcall4_start
,
__initcall5_start
,
__initcall6_start
,
__initcall7_start
,
__initcall_end
,
};

/* Keep these in sync with initcalls in include/linux/init.h */
static char *initcall_level_names[] __initdata = {
"early",
"core",
"postcore",
"arch",
"subsys",
"fs",
"device",
"late",
};

static void __init do_initcall_level(int level)
{
extern const struct kernel_param __start___param[], __stop___param[];
initcall_t *fn;

strcpy
(static_command_line, saved_command_line);
parse_args
(initcall_level_names[level],
static_command_line
, __start___param,
__stop___param
- __start___param,
level
, level,
&repair_env_string);

for (fn = initcall_levels[level]; fn < initcall_levels[level+1]; fn++)
do_one_initcall
(*fn);
}

static void __init do_initcalls(void)
{
int level;

for (level = 0; level < ARRAY_SIZE(initcall_levels) - 1; level++)
do_initcall_level
(level);
}
You can see the names above with their associated index: early is 0, core is 1, etc. Each of those__initcall*_start entries point to an array of function pointers which get called one after the other. Those function pointers are the actual modules and built-in initialization functions, the ones you specify with module_initearly_initcall, etc.
What determines which function pointer gets into which __initcall*_start array? The linker does this, using hints from the module_init and *_initcall macros. Those macros, for built-in modules, assign the function pointers to a specific ELF section.

Example with module_init

Considering a built-in module (configured with y in .config), module_init simply expands like this (include/linux/init.h):
#define module_init(x)  __initcall(x);
and then we follow this:
#define __initcall(fn) device_initcall(fn)
#define device_initcall(fn) __define_initcall(fn, 6)
So, now, module_init(my_func) means __define_initcall(my_func, 6). This is_define_initcall:
#define __define_initcall(fn, id) \
static initcall_t __initcall_##fn##id __used \
__attribute__
((__section__(".initcall" #id ".init"))) = fn
which means, so far, we have:
static initcall_t __initcall_my_func6 __used
__attribute__
((__section__(".initcall6.init"))) = my_func;
Wow, lots of GCC stuff, but it only means that a new symbol is created, __initcall_my_func6, that's put in the ELF section named .initcall6.init, and as you can see, points to the specified function (my_func). Adding all the functions to this section eventually creates the complete array of function pointers, all stored within the .initcall6.init ELF section.

Initialization example

Look again at this chunk:
for (fn = initcall_levels[level]; fn < initcall_levels[level+1]; fn++)
do_one_initcall
(*fn);
Let's take level 6, which represents all the built-in modules initialized with module_init. It starts from__initcall6_start, its value being the address of the first function pointer registered within the.initcall6.init section, and ends at __initcall7_start (excluded), incrementing each time with the size of *fn (which is an initcall_t, which is a void*, which is 32-bit or 64-bit depending on the architecture).
do_one_initcall will simply call the function pointed to by the current entry.
Within a specific initialization section, what determines why an initialization function is called before another is simply the order of the files within the Makefiles since the linker will concatenate the__initcall_* symbols one after the other in their respective ELF init. sections.
This fact is actually used in the kernel, e.g. with device drivers (drivers/Makefile):
# GPIO must come after pinctrl as gpios may need to mux pins etc
obj-y += pinctrl/
obj-y += gpio/
tl;dr: the Linux kernel initialization mechanism is really beautiful, albeit highlight GCC-dependent.

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