[PATCH v3 1/4] ARM: davinci: da8xx-dt: Add ti-aemif lookup for clock matching
Russell King - ARM Linux
linux at armlinux.org.uk
Thu Aug 18 02:04:37 PDT 2016
On Thu, Aug 18, 2016 at 07:33:19AM +0000, Karl Beldan wrote:
> Checking clk_get:
>
> struct clk *clk_get(struct device *dev, const char *con_id)
> {
> [...]
> if (dev) {
> struct clk *__of_clk_get_by_name(struct device_node *np,
> const char *dev_id,
> const char *name)
> clk = __of_clk_get_by_name(dev->of_node, dev_id, con_id);
> [...]
> }
> return clk_get_sys(dev_id, con_id);
> }
>
> In DT case the con_id _is_ the clock name, so the assertion "clk_get()
> does not look up a clock by name" would be false ?
Wrong.
clocks = <&provider 0>, <&provider 1>;
clock-names = "fck", "ick";
fck = clk_get(dev, "fck");
ick = clk_get(dev, "ick");
Works just the same. The whole point of the string is to identify an
_individual_ _input_ _to_ _the_ _device_ and not a global clock name.
Think what happens if you specify a clock name. Where does that name
come from? What if the clock is named differently on another SoC?
With that approach, we need to define a new set of APIs to allow a
device to determine the global clock name for the clock that it's
interested in - which is completely absurd when we've already got
that within clk_get().
The whole point of the clk API is to abstract those differences. That's
why it takes a _connection_ _id_ and not a clock name.
I really can't understand why people keep getting this wrong in their
heads. It makes no sense to me for this to take a global clock name.
> Also, numerous commits refer to *clk_get(*, NULL) as getting an unnamed
> clock, although it only really is accurate to the point in DT cases.
Table-driven clkdev copes fine with that, and will try to locate an
appropriate table entry with a NULL connection ID, not matching any
non-NULL connection ID entry.
In the DT case, it's always the first specified clock.
--
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