mac80211: don't assume driver has been attached on registration

mac80211's ieee80211_register_hw() is often called within the
probe path so it cannot assume the device's driver structure
has been attached yet so to create a workqueue instead of
using driver->name use the wiphy's phy%d name. The name doesn't
really matter anyway.

This should fix sporadic oopses found when we race to beat the
driver pointer setting. Not even sure how this was working properly.

http://www.kerneloops.org/search.php?search=ieee80211_register_hw

Signed-off-by: Luis R. Rodriguez <lrodriguez@atheros.com>
Acked-by: Johannes Berg <johannes@sipsolutions.net>
Signed-off-by: John W. Linville <linville@tuxdriver.com>
This commit is contained in:
Luis R. Rodriguez 2008-11-14 14:44:22 -08:00 committed by John W. Linville
parent 4d3601b234
commit 4ada424db1

View File

@ -722,7 +722,6 @@ EXPORT_SYMBOL(ieee80211_alloc_hw);
int ieee80211_register_hw(struct ieee80211_hw *hw)
{
struct ieee80211_local *local = hw_to_local(hw);
const char *name;
int result;
enum ieee80211_band band;
struct net_device *mdev;
@ -787,8 +786,8 @@ int ieee80211_register_hw(struct ieee80211_hw *hw)
mdev->header_ops = &ieee80211_header_ops;
mdev->set_multicast_list = ieee80211_master_set_multicast_list;
name = wiphy_dev(local->hw.wiphy)->driver->name;
local->hw.workqueue = create_freezeable_workqueue(name);
local->hw.workqueue =
create_freezeable_workqueue(wiphy_name(local->hw.wiphy));
if (!local->hw.workqueue) {
result = -ENOMEM;
goto fail_workqueue;