[PATCH 06/14] ARM: dts: sun8i: Add cpu0 label to sun8i-h3.dtsi
Ondřej Jirman
megous at megous.com
Sun Jul 17 07:39:27 PDT 2016
On 25.6.2016 09:02, Maxime Ripard wrote:
> On Sat, Jun 25, 2016 at 09:02:48AM +0800, Chen-Yu Tsai wrote:
>> On Sat, Jun 25, 2016 at 6:51 AM, Ondřej Jirman <megous at megous.com> wrote:
>>> Hello,
>>>
>>> comments below.
>>>
>>> On 24.6.2016 05:48, Chen-Yu Tsai wrote:
>>>> On Fri, Jun 24, 2016 at 3:20 AM, <megous at megous.com> wrote:
>>>>> From: Ondrej Jirman <megous at megous.com>
>>>>>
>>>>> Add label to the first cpu so that it can be referenced
>>>>> from derived dts files.
>>>>>
>>>>> Signed-off-by: Ondrej Jirman <megous at megous.com>
>>>>> ---
>>>>> arch/arm/boot/dts/sun8i-h3.dtsi | 2 +-
>>>>> 1 file changed, 1 insertion(+), 1 deletion(-)
>>>>>
>>>>> diff --git a/arch/arm/boot/dts/sun8i-h3.dtsi b/arch/arm/boot/dts/sun8i-h3.dtsi
>>>>> index 9938972..82faefc 100644
>>>>> --- a/arch/arm/boot/dts/sun8i-h3.dtsi
>>>>> +++ b/arch/arm/boot/dts/sun8i-h3.dtsi
>>>>> @@ -52,7 +52,7 @@
>>>>> #address-cells = <1>;
>>>>> #size-cells = <0>;
>>>>>
>>>>> - cpu at 0 {
>>>>> + cpu0: cpu at 0 {
>>>>> compatible = "arm,cortex-a7";
>>>>> device_type = "cpu";
>>>>> reg = <0>;
>>>>
>>>> Can you also set the cpu clock here? It is part of the SoC
>>>> and does not belong in the board DTS files.
>>>
>>> Do you mean operating-points, or something else? Different SBCs will
>>> probably require different combinations of operating points just for
>>> safety's sake, because they have different regulators and [some have
>>> botched] thermal designs, so it might make sense to customize it for
>>> differnt boards, and I don't feel adventurous enough setting it for all
>>> H3 boards out there.
>>
>> I meant clocks = <...> and clock-latency = <...>.
>>
>> These 2 are part of the SoC.
>>
>> The OPP can stay in the board files. It's a pity there's no standard
>> OPP table for H3 though. :(
>
> This has never been the case, and we always had some deviation in the
> FEX files for all the SoCs.
>
> If we could come up with standard OPPs that work for every one,
> there's no reason it can't happen here.
>
> I don't really see why the thermal design should change anything. If a
> boards heats faster, it will throttle down to a lower OPP faster, but
> those OPPs are not going to change.
So I tried, and found out that it will not be so easy. Different boards
have different regulators, and linux doesn't deal well with voltages
that are not supported by the regulator.
So even if the board can run at certain frequency if you round the
voltage to the next higher voltage supported by the regulator, opp
implementation doesn't do the rounding and just drops the operating
points that have no support in the voltage regulator.
We have boards that have 1.1/1.3V switching, only 1.3V, fine tuned
voltage regulation and every such board will need it's own set of
operating points.
I'd leave the OPP definitions in the board files for now.
cpu cpu0: _opp_add: OPP not supported by regulators (1368000000)
core: _opp_supported_by_regulators: OPP minuV: 1340000 maxuV: 1340000,
not supported by regulator
cpu cpu0: _opp_add: OPP not supported by regulators (1344000000)
core: _opp_supported_by_regulators: OPP minuV: 1340000 maxuV: 1340000,
not supported by regulator
cpu cpu0: _opp_add: OPP not supported by regulators (1296000000)
core: _opp_supported_by_regulators: OPP minuV: 1200000 maxuV: 1200000,
not supported by regulator
cpu cpu0: _opp_add: OPP not supported by regulators (1104000000)
core: _opp_supported_by_regulators: OPP minuV: 1140000 maxuV: 1140000,
not supported by regulator
cpu cpu0: _opp_add: OPP not supported by regulators (1008000000)
regards,
o.
> Maxime
>
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