Commit Graph

2 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Joakim Andersson 4be66bd33d Bluetooth: Fix host RX thread deadlock
Fix host RX thread being deadlocked. The deadlock occurs because the
RX thread is stuck waiting in conn_tx_alloc with K_FOREVER but if the
connection is disconnected only the RX thread can unblock it in the
handling of the disconnect event.

This commit fixes this deadlock by splitting the processing of the
disconnected event into two parts.
The part needed to unblock the RX is to release resources held by
unack'ed TX packets and mark the connection state as not connected
anymore.
The RX thread waiting for free_tx fifo and the TX thread waiting for
the bt_dev.le.pkts semaphore will both check the connected state after
having acquired them and will abort if disconnected.
The rest of the processing will be handled at normal RX thread
priority like normal.

Move the bt_recv_prio handling to the Bluetooth host when the host
has defined its own RX thread (CONFIG_BT_RECV_IS_RX_THREAD=n).
If the HCI driver has the RX thread (CONFIG_BT_RECV_IS_RX_THREAD=y),
then the responsibility to call bt_recv and bt_recv_prio correctly
falls to the HCI driver.
The helper function bt_hci_evt_is_prio() is replaced with
bt_hci_evt_get_flags() so that the HCI driver can do this correctly.
This decision to replace was made so that existing HCI drivers
maintained out-of-tree will fail at compile time with the new system.

Signed-off-by: Joakim Andersson <joakim.andersson@nordicsemi.no>
Signed-off-by: Carles Cufi <carles.cufi@nordicsemi.no>

Bluetooth: host: Move bt_recv_prio to host when RX thread is defined

Signed-off-by: Joakim Andersson <joakim.andersson@nordicsemi.no>
2020-07-06 11:15:39 +02:00
Thomas Ebert Hansen c3de368e47 tests: bluetooth: Test vendor-specific events
Add test for a proprietary HCI Vendor-Specific event.

In the test the controller is replaced with a small stub controller,
with limited support of the initialization flow from the host.

After initialization, a HCI prop event callback is registered and an
prop event is triggered and sent to the host. It is then verified that
the registered callback is called.

Signed-off-by: Thomas Ebert Hansen <thoh@oticon.com>
2019-05-20 13:33:36 +02:00