[PATCH v4 4/7] cpufreq: add clk-reg cpufreq driver
Russell King - ARM Linux
linux at arm.linux.org.uk
Tue Jan 3 08:47:09 EST 2012
On Tue, Jan 03, 2012 at 09:25:30PM +0800, Richard Zhao wrote:
> Hi Russel,
>
> On 3 January 2012 17:06, Russell King - ARM Linux
> <linux at arm.linux.org.uk> wrote:
> > On Mon, Dec 26, 2011 at 09:44:52PM +0800, Richard Zhao wrote:
> >> On Mon, Dec 26, 2011 at 11:10:30AM +0000, Mark Brown wrote:
> >> > The *call* is there in the regulator subsystem, it's just that none of
> >> > the drivers back it up with an actual implementation yet. Which turns
> >> > out to be a good thing as cpufreq can't currently understand variable
> >> > latencies and the governors don't deal well with non-trivial latencies
> >> > anyway.
> >> but clk API don't have such calls. and many SoCs only adjust clk frequencies, using
> >> one single voltage.
> >
> > That's because it's often not known - especially in the case of PLLs,
> > data sheets don't tend to specify how long it takes for the PLL to relock
> > after a requested change. If it's important that the PLL be locked,
> > there will be a bit to poll (or they'll cause the CPU itself to stall
> > while the PLL is not locked.)
> >
> > So, for these kinds of situations, how do you suggest that the clk API
> > provides this information?
> In latest v6 version, I get clk transition latency from dt property, and get
> regulator transition latency from regulator API.
> Could you please help review other arm common changes in v6 version?
You didn't get my point: how do you specify a clock transition latency
for a clock with a PLL when the data sheets don't tell you what that is,
and they instead give you a bit to poll?
Do you:
(a) make up some number and hope that it's representative
(b) not specify any transition latency
(c) think about the problem _now_ and define what it means for a clock
without a transition latency.
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