[RFC PATCH 2/3] clk: stm32: Add clock driver for STM32F4[23]xxx devices
Stephen Boyd
sboyd at codeaurora.org
Fri Jun 5 17:10:26 PDT 2015
On 06/05, Daniel Thompson wrote:
> On 04/06/15 23:07, Stephen Boyd wrote:
> >On 05/22, Daniel Thompson wrote:
> >>+#include <linux/clkdev.h>
> >
> >Are you using this include?
>
> Not very much?
>
> Turns out I was relying on these to get kzalloc() defined but there
> are better headers for me to use for that!
Hah ok. We should delete some of those arch specific clkdev.h
files...
>
> >
> >>+#include <linux/err.h>
> >>+#include <linux/io.h>
> >>+#include <linux/clk-provider.h>
> >>+#include <linux/spinlock.h>
> >>+#include <linux/of.h>
> >>+#include <linux/of_address.h>
> >>+
> >>+#include <linux/debugfs.h>
> >
> >Are you using this include?
>
> No (this is already gone in v2).
Oh hrm.. I must have missed v2.
>
> >>+
> >>+ if (__clk_get_flags(hw->clk) & CLK_SET_RATE_PARENT) {
> >>+ unsigned long best_parent = rate / mult;
> >>+
> >>+ *prate =
> >>+ __clk_round_rate(__clk_get_parent(hw->clk), best_parent);
> >>+ }
> >>+
> >>+ return *prate * mult;
> >>+}
> >>+
> >>+static int clk_apb_mul_set_rate(struct clk_hw *hw, unsigned long rate,
> >>+ unsigned long parent_rate)
> >>+{
> >
> >Why don't we need to do anything here?
>
> This clock cannot change its own rate. It is very nearly a fixed
> factor clock but with the additional quirk that the "fixed" factor
> changes depending upon the rate of the parent clock.
>
> This is the same implementation as clk-fixed-factor. I concluded
> that it returns success because round rate should always result in
> the set rate for this clock being a nop.
Ok. A comment here would be helpful in the future. We probably
ought to have a comment in clk-fixed-factor as well.
>
>
> >>+ return 0;
> >>+}
> >>+
> >>+static struct clk_ops clk_apb_mul_factor_ops = {
> >
> >const?
>
> Makes sense...
>
> You want a patch for clk-fixed-factor too?
Sure.
>
>
> >>+struct clk *clk_register_apb_mul(struct device *dev, const char *name,
> >>+ const char *parent_name, unsigned long flags,
> >>+ u8 bit_idx)
> >>+{
> >>+ struct clk_apb_mul *am;
> >>+ struct clk_init_data init;
> >>+ struct clk *clk;
> >>+
> >>+ am = kzalloc(sizeof(*am), GFP_KERNEL);
> >>+ if (!am)
> >>+ return ERR_PTR(-ENOMEM);
> >>+
> >>+ am->bit_idx = bit_idx;
> >>+ am->hw.init = &init;
> >>+
> >>+ init.name = name;
> >>+ init.ops = &clk_apb_mul_factor_ops;
> >>+ init.flags = flags | CLK_IS_BASIC;
> >
> >Is it basic?
>
> Tough question.
>
> The absence of this flag appears grants arch code permission to use
> secret backdoors to do "weird stuff" but making special assumptions
> about the type of the clock. This clock keeps its implementation
> private so noone outside the compilation unit can usefully cast it.
>
> However, it also looks like only omap2 is the only platform that
> makes these special assumptions so when this code is run on STM32
> there is nothing to actually consume the CLK_IS_BASIC flag at
> runtime.
>
> In other words the flag is useless but, I think, also correctly applied.
>
> I'd be happy to remove it if anyone disagrees with the guesswork above.
>
> Alternatively, I could write a patch to *invert* CLK_IS_BASIC and
> rename it CLK_CASTABLE on the grounds that only the people doing
> "weird stuff" should have to care about this flag at all. Any
> interest in that?
No I think we should delete CLK_IS_BASIC. So please remove it
unless you actually need it.
--
Qualcomm Innovation Center, Inc. is a member of Code Aurora Forum,
a Linux Foundation Collaborative Project
More information about the linux-arm-kernel
mailing list