[PATCH v4 1/2] ARM: keystone: pm: switch to use generic pm domains

Mike Turquette mturquette at linaro.org
Mon Nov 24 22:44:06 PST 2014


Quoting Arnd Bergmann (2014-11-24 02:50:28)
> On Friday 21 November 2014 20:58:01 Grygorii Strashko wrote:
> > Hi Kevin,
> > On 11/21/2014 10:06 AM, Geert Uytterhoeven wrote:
> > > On Fri, Nov 21, 2014 at 2:30 AM, Kevin Hilman <khilman at kernel.org> wrote:
> > >> Geert Uytterhoeven <geert at linux-m68k.org> writes:
> > >>
> > >> So now I'm confused about why the PM domain has to do anything special
> > >> if the presence/absence of the clocks is already handled by the DT.
> > > 
> > > Just adding a clock property to a device node in DT doesn't enable the clock
> > > automatically, nor make it runtime-managed automatically.
> > > Compare this to e.g. pinctrl, where adding pinctrl properties to DT does enable
> > > them automatically, without the driver for the device having to care about it.
> > >
> > > Drivers interfacing external hardware typically do care about clocks, as they
> > > have to program clock generators for the external hardware interface (e.g.
> > > driving spi or i2c buses at specific frequencies).
> 
> But is this a property of the driver or of the device? If this is true
> independent of the driver implementation, I don't see a problem with 
> the approach of linking to a power-domain that automatically manages
> all clocks for the devices that need this, and requires the driver to
> manage them itself when there are any clocks that can't be handled
> with the generic clk-power-domain implementation.
>  
> > 
> > In non-DT case, we have possibility to divide clocks on "fck" and "opt"
> > (The way it can be done is not convenient, but it is - .con_id).
> > 
> > For DT-case - no way now. Also, PM domains are not physically present on
> > Keystone 2 and GPD was selected as glue layer to integrate DT, pm_clk and
> > PM runtime all together (one big-fat-global PM domain :).
> > 
> > So, I was able to find only following way to define "fck" clocks in DT:
> >       clocks = <&papllclk>, <&clkcpgmac>, <&chipclk12>;
> >       clock-names = "clk_pa", "clk_cpgmac", "cpsw_cpts_rft_clk";
> >       fck-clocks = <&papllclk>, <&clkcpgmac>;
> > As you can see - this will lead to data duplication in DT (
> > 
> > Any propositions are welcome?
> > 
> > Unfortunately, It seems that if we would not able to find DT solution
> > then there will be following ways to move forward:
> > - "remove the power domain proxy from your drivers and use the clocks directly" 
> > ((c) Arnd Bergmann).
> > [As possibility - It can be allowed to use clk_pm APIs by drivers]
> > - continue using platform specific implementations.
> 
> Could the driver maybe identify the clocks that it wants to manage itself
> to the pm-domain code? If it's safe for a device to have the clock turned
> on at the default rate before loading the driver, any device that is connected
> to the simple clk-pm-domain code could have all its clocks start out as
> owned by the pm-domain, but then claim the clocks it needs to reprogram for
> itself and take them out of the pmdomain.

I was thinking along similar lines. The functional versus optional stuff
is really a property of the consuming device, not the clock signal
itself.

Instead of adding a new property to the clock binding (e.g. fck-clocks
or optional-clocks), could we simply wrap those lists of clocks in
another node? E.g:

mandatory-clocks {
       clocks = <&papllclk>, <&clkcpgmac>;
       clock-names = "clk_pa", "clk_cpgmac";
}

clocks = <&papllclk>, <&clkcpgmac>, <&chipclk12>;
       clocks = <&clkcpgmac>;
       clock-names = "cpsw_cpts_rft_clk";
}

I'm showing my DT ignorance on this one. I haven't really thought
through how these sub-nodes would work with of_clk_* handlers in
drivers/clk/clkdev.c.

Regards,
Mike

> 
>         Arnd
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