[RFC/NOT FOR MERGING 2/3] serial: omap: remove hwmod dependency

Santosh Shilimkar santosh.shilimkar at ti.com
Sat Feb 16 04:31:29 EST 2013


On Saturday 16 February 2013 02:52 PM, Felipe Balbi wrote:
> Hi,
>
> On Sat, Feb 16, 2013 at 02:47:45PM +0530, Santosh Shilimkar wrote:
>>> On Sat, Feb 16, 2013 at 11:31:21AM +0530, Santosh Shilimkar wrote:
>>>>>> The main goal is to avoid duplicating data both in hwmod and DT.
>>>>>> That's pretty much solved as we can have the driver probe populate
>>>>>> the common data for hwmod from DT as Santosh has already demonstrated.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> Then we also want the driver specific idle and reset code to be done
>>>>>> in the drivers rather than in hwmod and glue it together with hwmod
>>>>>> using runtime PM. The biggest issue there is how do we reset and idle
>>>>>> some piece of hardware for PM purposes when there's no driver loaded.
>>>>>
>>>>> right, this will be a tough nut to crack.
>>>>>
>>>>> I guess the only way would be reset all IPs early in the boot process,
>>>>> before even creating the platform-devices. Can we do that ? I mean, from
>>>>> omap_device_build_from_dt() we have access to address space of all
>>>>> devices, through ti,hwmods we can figure out which hwmods are linked to
>>>>> that particular device, so whenever you build a device, you could just
>>>>> call _reset().
>>>>>
>>>> Thats what we do today and it works perfectly. As per Tony's suggestion,
>>>> we need to move the non-probed devices reset and idle setup to late_init
>>>> which is also doable.
>>>>
>>>> In that case when probed driver calls runtime_get(), we reset that
>>>> device and setup the idle settings. And remainder of the devices
>>>> are managed in late_init().
>>>
>>> what's the point in moving it to late_initcall() ? It makes no
>>> difference, if no driver binds to that device it will stay in reset
>>> anyway. Maybe what we're missing is properly idling (not exactly) all
>>> devices before driver probe kicks in.
>>>
>> I think it is largely reducing the early init dependencies and also
>> reducing the role of platform code who today takes care of every
>> device idle and reset initialization. That way late_init() will
>> only have to care about the devices which are not probed by
>> drivers.
>>
>> Tony, Is that right ?
>
> Makes not much difference, except that you will have to keep track of
> which devices have gotten a driver probed and which haven't.
>
> IMO, it sounds a lot better to reset everything early on, so we know
> we're starting at a known stage (and thus drop all bootloader
> dependencies) then to follow the other route.
>
I tend to agree with you. This was exactly the reason Paul and Benoit
added that support first up as part of early init code.

>>> The difficult part is handling special reset requirements for devices
>>> without drivers as there'd be no ->runtime_reset() to call.
>>>
>> I don't think that requirement exists so if we address the driver
>> requirement, we are good. Even otherwise also, it can be managed
>
> Look back at what you want to do at late_initcall() time. You want to
> reset all devices which haven't gotten a driver bound to them.
>
>> from platform code.
>
> right, the you will need even more data in hwmod to let it know about
> the special devices. /me wonders when the amount of data will actually
> decrease.
>
Well that is already supported. There is no need to add any additional
information. Device which are initialized, there state is set as
initialized. So the late_init() will just have to iterate over
un-initialised devices.

Just to be clear, I am also in favor of just keeping that part as it
is today but we were exploring other options based on comments from
Tony during OMAP5 data review.

Regards,
Santosh




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