On Fri, Jun 14, 2013 at 05:18:46PM +0900, Jingoo Han wrote: > On Thursday, June 13, 2013 11:14 PM, Arnd Bergmann wrote: > > On Thursday 13 June 2013 22:22:31 Jingoo Han wrote: [...] > > > +static int __exit exynos_pcie_remove(struct platform_device *pdev) > > > +{ > > > + struct pcie_port *pp = platform_get_drvdata(pdev); > > > + > > > + clk_disable_unprepare(pp->bus_clk); > > > + clk_disable_unprepare(pp->clk); > > > + > > > + return 0; > > > +} > > > > You also don't remove the PCI devices here, as mentioned in an earlier > > review. > > I reviewed Marvell PCIe driver and Tegra PCIe driver; however, > I cannot know what you mean. > > Could let me know which additional functions are needed? We don't currently do that on Tegra either. pci-mvebu doesn't do that either, but they don't implement the driver's .remove() in the first place. I think the biggest missing piece is pci_common_exit(), the counterpart of pci_common_init(), to cleanup a host bridge on ARM. I haven't looked in detail at the other architectures, but I suspect there must be some code to call when a host bridge is removed. Looking at drivers/pci/remove.c, it seems like pci_remove_root_bus() might be what we're looking at. It isn't exported so it can't be used by modules, but that can be changed. Is that how a host bridge is typically removed from the system? Thierry