oprofile and ARM A9 hardware counter
Jon Hunter
jon-hunter at ti.com
Tue May 8 18:20:26 EDT 2012
Hi Kevin,
On 05/08/2012 04:28 PM, Kevin Hilman wrote:
> Jon Hunter <jon-hunter at ti.com> writes:
>
>> On 05/08/2012 11:18 AM, Kevin Hilman wrote:
>>> "Cousson, Benoit" <b-cousson at ti.com> writes:
>>>
>>>> On 5/8/2012 4:00 PM, Kevin Hilman wrote:
>>>>> Jean Pihet<jean.pihet at newoldbits.com> writes:
>>>>>
>>>>> [...]
>>>>>
>>>>>>>>> Yes, indeed, we should not hack the flags to fix that kind of issue. The
>>>>>>>>> flags describe what the HW is capable of, and the EMU CD can support
>>>>>>>>> HW_AUTO
>>>>>>>>> and SW_WAKEUP. AFAIK, the issue with that EMU CD is that the only valid
>>>>>>>>> next
>>>>>>>>> power state is OFF, meaning that no retention mode is supported. So any
>>>>>>>>> transition to idle will go to OFF and lead to a reset upon wakeup.
>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>> That being said, being able to transition to OFF during idle is a
>>>>>>>>> perfectly
>>>>>>>>> valid state for most powerdomain in OMAP anyway, so we should be able to
>>>>>>>>> restore from OFF mode smoothly.
>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>> It looks to me that what is missing here is *just* a restore path in the
>>>>>>>>> PMU/CTI code. But I'm probably missing some nasty details in this issue
>>>>>>>>> :-)
>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>> Although it is perfectly feasible to have a seamless transition of the
>>>>>>>> EMU power domain, I think the PMU counters will not be accurate
>>>>>>>> anymore since they stop counting events when going to OFF and re-start
>>>>>>>> after the state restore.
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> Good point, but I think the PMU might still works fine because located
>>>>>>> inside the MPU domain. AFAIR, only the path to access the PMU and the CTI is
>>>>>>> going to OFF and thus will be reset.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> Ever better point ;p Thanks for the precision.
>>>>>> In any case my point was: can we allow the EMU CD to go OFF or prevent
>>>>>> it from doing so? We need to answer that question first.
>>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>> The idea I've suggested is to use runtime PM for this. As long as the
>>>>> PMU is in use, it will be runtime PM enabled (and not allowed to go into
>>>>> HWSUP idle.) When it is not used, it will be allowed to HWSUP idle, and
>>>>> then be reset. The next time it is needed, the runtime resume will need
>>>>> to do a full re-init.
>>>>
>>>> Oh, but does that mean that this driver is not pm_runtime adapted yet?
>>>>
>>>
>>> Actually, it is. Ming Lei has done it.
>>>
>>> Currently, Will has collected this[1] and is waiting (patiently) for us
>>> to produce a real fix that doesn't kill PM in the process.
>>
>> I had to make a couple mods to Ming's patches but I do have something
>> working now that _should_ not break PM. However, per my previous email
>> (in response to Benoit's) I am struggling with the definition of the
>> CLKDM_CAN_XXXXXX_AUTO flags to know the correct way to fix this.
>>
>> I was going to send out my patches, but I wanted to get some more
>> feedback on this first.
>
> While waiting for feeback, if you set the flags to CAN_FORCE_WAKEUP and
> CAN_HWSUP, can you get the PMU interrupts working after an EMU CD idle
> transition (and reset.)
Unfortunately, not. By setting CAN_HWSUP, the EMU CD will be put back
into HW_AUTO state when it is enabled. The hwmod _enable() function will
first put the CD into SW_WKUP (because CAN_FORCE_WAKEUP is set), but
because it was previously in HW_AUTO state AND CAN_ENABLE_AUTO is set it
will be be put back into HW_AUTO again. Hence, we are back where we begun!
CAN_ENABLE_AUTO is causing me a headache, because whenever you call
clkdm_allow_idle, it will allow it to idle and this happens during the
_enable() sequence :-(
Does this make sense?
Cheers
Jon
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