mx6qsabresd hangs on linux-next

Shawn Guo shawn.guo at freescale.com
Tue May 6 19:09:51 PDT 2014


On Tue, May 06, 2014 at 10:00:29PM +0200, Sascha Hauer wrote:
> On Tue, May 06, 2014 at 06:04:45PM +0200, Maxime Coquelin wrote:
> > Hi Fabio,
> > 
> > On 05/06/2014 05:49 PM, Fabio Estevam wrote:
> > >On Tue, May 6, 2014 at 12:36 PM, Fabio Estevam <festevam at gmail.com> wrote:
> > >
> > >>Indeed, if I revert:
> > >>
> > >>commit e7489693b3a853ab6dfad52f7e6af553ae8d3f28
> > >>Author: Maxime COQUELIN <maxime.coquelin at st.com>
> > >>Date:   Wed Jan 29 17:24:08 2014 +0100
> > >>
> > >>     clk: divider: Optimize clk_divider_bestdiv loop
> > >>
> > >>     Currently, the for-loop used to try all the different dividers to find the
> > >>     one that best fit tries all the values from 1 to max_div,
> > >>incrementing by one.
> > >>     In case of power-of-two, or table based divider, the loop isn't optimal.
> > >>
> > >>     Instead of incrementing by one, this patch provides directly the
> > >>next divider.
> > >>
> > >>     Signed-off-by: Maxime Coquelin <maxime.coquelin at st.com>
> > >>     Signed-off-by: Mike Turquette <mturquette at linaro.org>
> > >>
> > >>Then the board does not hang.
> > >
> > >Isn't the increment of i missing?
> > 
> > i is incremented in _next_div():
> > 
> > +static int _next_div(struct clk_divider *divider, int div)
> > +{
> > +	div++;
> > +
> > +	if (divider->flags & CLK_DIVIDER_POWER_OF_TWO)
> > +		return __roundup_pow_of_two(div);
> > +	if (divider->table)
> > +		return _round_up_table(divider->table, div);
> > +
> > +	return div;
> > +}
> 
> This cannot work. _round_up_table is implemented like this:
> 
> static int _round_up_table(const struct clk_div_table *table, int div)
> {
> 	const struct clk_div_table *clkt;
> 	int up = _get_table_maxdiv(table);
> 
> 	for (clkt = table; clkt->div; clkt++) {
> 		if (clkt->div == div)
> 			return clkt->div;
> 		...
> 	}
> 	...
> }
> 
> Here when a table entry matches the input div this function will return
> exactly the input div. This means _next_div() will always return the
> same value and clk_divider_bestdiv() has an infinite loop:
> 
> 	for (i = 1; i <= maxdiv; i = _next_div(divider, i)) {
> 		...
> 	}

Hmmm, isn't the first thing that _next_div() does to increment the input
div?

Shawn



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