[RFC PATCH 05/15] pwm: introduce default period and polarity concepts
Boris Brezillon
boris.brezillon at free-electrons.com
Mon Jul 20 01:14:43 PDT 2015
Hi Thierry,
On Mon, 20 Jul 2015 10:03:14 +0200
Thierry Reding <thierry.reding at gmail.com> wrote:
> On Thu, Jul 02, 2015 at 09:49:55AM +0200, Boris Brezillon wrote:
> > On Thu, 2 Jul 2015 08:44:45 +0200
> > Uwe Kleine-König <u.kleine-koenig at pengutronix.de> wrote:
> >
> > > On Wed, Jul 01, 2015 at 10:21:51AM +0200, Boris Brezillon wrote:
> > > > When requested by a user, the PWM is assigned a default period and polarity
> > > > extracted from the DT, the platform data or statically set by the driver.
> > > > Those default values are currently stored in the period and polarity
> > > > fields of the pwm_device struct, but they will be stored somewhere else
> > > > once we have introduced the architecture allowing for hardware state
> > > > retrieval.
> > > >
> > > > The pwm_set_default_polarity and pwm_set_default_period should only be
> > > > used by PWM drivers or the PWM core infrastructure to specify the
> > > > default period and polarity values.
> > > Would it make sense to put the prototypes of
> > > pwm_set_default_p{olarity,eriod} into (say) drivers/pwm/pwm-private.h
> > > then?
> > >
> >
> > Yes, definitely. I was thinking about moving those functions/prototypes
> > into include/linux/pwm-provider.h, but I'm fine with
> > drivers/pwm/pwm-private.h too.
> >
> > Thierry, any opinion ?
>
> I'm not sure I see the need for this. If they are the default values and
> drivers have no need to change them, then storing them in the regular
> period and polarity fields seems just fine (they'll be propagated into
> new state objects as they get created).
>
> And if the driver has a need to change them, then why would it ever care
> about the default values?
Because the period is often directly extracted from the DT, and this
extracted period may not match the one configured by the bootloader.
If the driver wants to display the current status without changing the
PWM state, then the driver will use the current state. ITOH, if it
has to apply a new config, the driver will use the default period
value (extracted from the DT) and change the duty-cycle depending on its
needs.
This is the case we have with the pwm-regulator driver: we want to
display the initial voltage value without changing the PWM config, and
when someone decides to change the voltage, we want to use the default
period instead of keeping the one configured by the bootloader.
Best Regards,
Boris
--
Boris Brezillon, Free Electrons
Embedded Linux and Kernel engineering
http://free-electrons.com
More information about the linux-arm-kernel
mailing list