[PATCH 2/2] clk: allow reentrant calls into the clk framework
Thomas Gleixner
tglx at linutronix.de
Thu Mar 28 05:33:50 EDT 2013
On Wed, 27 Mar 2013, Mike Turquette wrote:
> Reentrancy into the clock framework is necessary for clock operations
> that result in nested calls to the clk api. A common example is a clock
> that is prepared via an i2c transaction, such as a clock inside of a
> discrete audio chip or a power management IC. The i2c subsystem itself
> will use the clk api resulting in a deadlock:
>
> clk_prepare(audio_clk)
> i2c_transfer(..)
> clk_prepare(i2c_controller_clk)
>
> The ability to reenter the clock framework prevents this deadlock.
>
> Other use cases exist such as allowing .set_rate callbacks to call
> clk_set_parent to achieve the best rate, or to save power in certain
> configurations. Yet another example is performing pinctrl operations
> from a clk_ops callback. Calls into the pinctrl subsystem may call
> clk_{un}prepare on an unrelated clock. Allowing for nested calls to
> reenter the clock framework enables both of these use cases.
>
> Reentrancy is implemented by two global pointers that track the owner
> currently holding a global lock. One pointer tracks the owner during
> sleepable, mutex-protected operations and the other one tracks the owner
> during non-interruptible, spinlock-protected operations.
>
> When the clk framework is entered we try to hold the global lock. If it
> is held we compare the current task id against the current owner; a
s/task id/task/ We store a the task pointer in the owner variable.
Reviewed-by: Thomas Gleixner <tglx at linutronix.de>
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