1
0
Fork 0

watchdog: dw_wdt: keepalive the watchdog at write time

If you've got code that does this in a tight loop
  1. Open watchdog
  2. Send 'expect close'
  3. Close watchdog
...you'll eventually trigger a watchdog reset.  You can reproduce this
by using daisydog (1) and running:
  while true; do daisydog -c > /dev/null; done

The problem is that each time you write to the watchdog for 'expect
close' it moves the timer .5 seconds out.  The timer thus never fires
and never pats the watchdog for you.

1: http://git.chromium.org/gitweb/?p=chromiumos/third_party/daisydog.git

Signed-off-by: Doug Anderson <dianders@chromium.org>
Tested-by: Jisheng Zhang <jszhang@marvell.com>
Reviewed-by: Dmitry Torokhov <dmitry.torokhov@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Guenter Roeck <linux@roeck-us.net>
Signed-off-by: Wim Van Sebroeck <wim@iguana.be>
steinar/wifi_calib_4_9_kernel
Doug Anderson 2015-05-07 21:27:45 -07:00 committed by Wim Van Sebroeck
parent 7fb466a7a7
commit 04b1a62e6b
1 changed files with 1 additions and 0 deletions

View File

@ -215,6 +215,7 @@ static ssize_t dw_wdt_write(struct file *filp, const char __user *buf,
}
dw_wdt_set_next_heartbeat();
dw_wdt_keepalive();
mod_timer(&dw_wdt.timer, jiffies + WDT_TIMEOUT);
return len;