[RFC PATCH 3/4] tty: serial: 8250 core: add runtime pm
Sebastian Andrzej Siewior
bigeasy at linutronix.de
Wed Jul 9 04:35:57 PDT 2014
On 07/09/2014 01:17 PM, Tony Lindgren wrote:
> * One Thousand Gnomes <gnomes at lxorguk.ukuu.org.uk> [140707 06:22]:
>> On Fri, 4 Jul 2014 18:34:10 +0200
>> Sebastian Andrzej Siewior <bigeasy at linutronix.de> wrote:
>>
>>> While comparing the OMAP-serial and the 8250 part of this I noticed that
>>> the the latter does not use runtime-pm.
>>
>> Yes it does, but 8250 parts (generally - omap presumably is special
>> here ?) need to be powered on to transmit/receive not just for register
>> access. The core uart layer implements a "pm" operation for this.
>
> At least for omaps the UARTs need to be idled for the SoC to
> hit off-idle where the SoC is powered off and rebooted during
> idle.
>
> So we can certainly enable this in a generic way, however, this
> can only be done under the following conditions:
>
> 1. We can save and restore the serial register context and detect
> when context was lost in the serial driver. The context loss
> can be detected by looking at some registers that are only
> initialized during init.
A register check on restore context? DLL+DLH might be a good hint here
since its value should be >0 in the running case.
>
> 2. There's a way for the serial RX pin to wake the SoC. On some
> omaps there's a separate pin specific wake-up interrupt that
> can be used for that.
That one would be handled by omap separately.
> 3. The serial PM features must be only enabled if requested by
> the user via sysfs. Typically extra latency and loss of the
> first RX character occur which is not acceptable to most
> applications.
Unless I'm mistaken the omap driver now initializes the timeout to -1.
So nothing happens unless this is enabled separately.
> Regards,
>
> Tony
>
Sebastian
More information about the linux-arm-kernel
mailing list