ctx->op, req->nbytes);
err = atmel_sha_hw_init(dd);
-
if (err)
- goto err1;
+ return atmel_sha_complete(dd, err);
+
+ /*
+ * atmel_sha_update_req() and atmel_sha_final_req() can return either:
+ * -EINPROGRESS: the hardware is busy and the SHA driver will resume
+ * its job later in the done_task.
+ * This is the main path.
+ *
+ * 0: the SHA driver can continue its job then release the hardware
+ * later, if needed, with atmel_sha_finish_req().
+ * This is the alternate path.
+ *
+ * < 0: an error has occurred so atmel_sha_complete(dd, err) has already
+ * been called, hence the hardware has been released.
+ * The SHA driver must stop its job without calling
+ * atmel_sha_finish_req(), otherwise atmel_sha_complete() would be
+ * called a second time.
+ *
+ * Please note that currently, atmel_sha_final_req() never returns 0.
+ */
dd->resume = atmel_sha_done;
if (ctx->op == SHA_OP_UPDATE) {
err = atmel_sha_update_req(dd);
- if (err != -EINPROGRESS && (ctx->flags & SHA_FLAGS_FINUP))
+ if (!err && (ctx->flags & SHA_FLAGS_FINUP))
/* no final() after finup() */
err = atmel_sha_final_req(dd);
} else if (ctx->op == SHA_OP_FINAL) {
err = atmel_sha_final_req(dd);
}
-err1:
- if (err != -EINPROGRESS)
+ if (!err)
/* done_task will not finish it, so do it here */
atmel_sha_finish_req(req, err);