[PATCH 2/3] phy: rockchip-emmc: Be tolerant to card clock of 0 in power on
Ulf Hansson
ulf.hansson at linaro.org
Sat Jul 23 02:39:06 PDT 2016
On 29 June 2016 at 17:18, Doug Anderson <dianders at chromium.org> wrote:
> Kishon,
>
> On Wed, Jun 29, 2016 at 6:49 AM, Kishon Vijay Abraham I <kishon at ti.com> wrote:
>> Hi,
>>
>> On Monday 27 June 2016 11:09 PM, Douglas Anderson wrote:
>>> It's possible that there are some reasons to turn the PHY on while the
>>> clock is 0. In this case we just won't wait for the DLL to lock.
>>>
>>> This is a bit of a stopgap until we figure out exactly when we're
>>> supposed to wait for the DLL to lock and when we're supposed to power
>>> cycle the PHY.
>>>
>>> Note: this patch should help with suspend/resume where the system will
>>> try to turn the PHY back on when the clock is 0.
>>>
>>> Signed-off-by: Douglas Anderson <dianders at chromium.org>
>>> ---
>>> drivers/phy/phy-rockchip-emmc.c | 59 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++---------------
>>> 1 file changed, 37 insertions(+), 22 deletions(-)
>>>
>>> diff --git a/drivers/phy/phy-rockchip-emmc.c b/drivers/phy/phy-rockchip-emmc.c
>>> index 9dce958233a0..a2aa6aca7dec 100644
>>> --- a/drivers/phy/phy-rockchip-emmc.c
>>> +++ b/drivers/phy/phy-rockchip-emmc.c
>>> @@ -88,15 +88,36 @@ static int rockchip_emmc_phy_power(struct phy *phy, bool on_off)
>>> unsigned int caldone;
>>> unsigned int dllrdy;
>>> unsigned int freqsel = PHYCTRL_FREQSEL_200M;
>>> + unsigned long rate;
>>> unsigned long timeout;
>>>
>>> - if (rk_phy->emmcclk != NULL) {
>>> - unsigned long rate = clk_get_rate(rk_phy->emmcclk);
>>> + /*
>>> + * Keep phyctrl_pdb and phyctrl_endll low to allow
>>> + * initialization of CALIO state M/C DFFs
>>> + */
>>> + regmap_write(rk_phy->reg_base,
>>> + rk_phy->reg_offset + GRF_EMMCPHY_CON6,
>>> + HIWORD_UPDATE(PHYCTRL_PDB_PWR_OFF,
>>> + PHYCTRL_PDB_MASK,
>>> + PHYCTRL_PDB_SHIFT));
>>> + regmap_write(rk_phy->reg_base,
>>> + rk_phy->reg_offset + GRF_EMMCPHY_CON6,
>>> + HIWORD_UPDATE(PHYCTRL_ENDLL_DISABLE,
>>> + PHYCTRL_ENDLL_MASK,
>>> + PHYCTRL_ENDLL_SHIFT));
>>> +
>>> + /* Already finish power_off above */
>>> + if (on_off == PHYCTRL_PDB_PWR_OFF)
>>> + return 0;
>>> +
>>> + rate = clk_get_rate(rk_phy->emmcclk);
>>> +
>>> + if (rate != 0) {
>>> unsigned long ideal_rate;
>>> unsigned long diff;
>>>
>>> switch (rate) {
>>> - case 0 ... 74999999:
>>> + case 1 ... 74999999:
>>> ideal_rate = 50000000;
>>> freqsel = PHYCTRL_FREQSEL_50M;
>>> break;
>>> @@ -127,25 +148,6 @@ static int rockchip_emmc_phy_power(struct phy *phy, bool on_off)
>>> }
>>>
>>> /*
>>> - * Keep phyctrl_pdb and phyctrl_endll low to allow
>>> - * initialization of CALIO state M/C DFFs
>>> - */
>>> - regmap_write(rk_phy->reg_base,
>>> - rk_phy->reg_offset + GRF_EMMCPHY_CON6,
>>> - HIWORD_UPDATE(PHYCTRL_PDB_PWR_OFF,
>>> - PHYCTRL_PDB_MASK,
>>> - PHYCTRL_PDB_SHIFT));
>>> - regmap_write(rk_phy->reg_base,
>>> - rk_phy->reg_offset + GRF_EMMCPHY_CON6,
>>> - HIWORD_UPDATE(PHYCTRL_ENDLL_DISABLE,
>>> - PHYCTRL_ENDLL_MASK,
>>> - PHYCTRL_ENDLL_SHIFT));
>>> -
>>> - /* Already finish power_off above */
>>> - if (on_off == PHYCTRL_PDB_PWR_OFF)
>>> - return 0;
>>> -
>>> - /*
>>> * According to the user manual, calpad calibration
>>> * cycle takes more than 2us without the minimal recommended
>>> * value, so we may need a little margin here
>>> @@ -183,6 +185,19 @@ static int rockchip_emmc_phy_power(struct phy *phy, bool on_off)
>>> HIWORD_UPDATE(PHYCTRL_ENDLL_ENABLE,
>>> PHYCTRL_ENDLL_MASK,
>>> PHYCTRL_ENDLL_SHIFT));
>>> +
>>> + /*
>>> + * We turned on the DLL even though the rate was 0 because we the
>>> + * clock might be turned on later. ...but we can't wait for the DLL
>>> + * to lock when the rate is 0 because it will never lock with no
>>> + * input clock.
>>> + *
>>> + * Technically we should be checking the lock later when the clock
>>> + * is turned on, but for now we won't.
>>> + */
>>> + if (rate == 0)
>>> + return 0;
>>
>> Why not return initially from rockchip_emmc_phy_power if the clock rate is '0'.
>> Are there other functions to lock the DLL apart from phy_power?
>
> Yeah, it's a big ugly right now. This ugliness is really needed
> because of <https://patchwork.kernel.org/patch/9201035/> because:
>
> 1. We power on the PHY at probe time and the card clock is in an
> unknown state at that time. It will be reported as 0 right now, but
> it may or may not actually be 0.
>
> 2. We don't have an easy way to call back into the PHY when we
> actually set the clock to a low rate (like 400kHz) for ID mode.
> Before this series I tried to power the PHY off and on for every clock
> change, but apparently that was causing problems.
>
>
> As talked about in <https://patchwork.kernel.org/patch/9201035/>, I
> think the right answer is to figure out how to get the common clock
> framework notifications to happen for the card clock and then remove
> the wholesale PHY power off / power on for every clock change. The
> PHY itself can register for the clock change notifications and figure
> out how much or how little to do on every clock change.
>
> Unfortunately, as also discussed in the other patch, it's not trivial
> to do this because I think it requires surgery on the main SDHCI
> driver to change the way it deals with the card clock. I'm not sure I
> have time for this delicate surgery right now and I'm hoping that
> perhaps Shawn will be able to help figure something out (maybe?) or I
> can try coming back to it later.
>
>
> In any case, I think a wholesale revert of my previous 150 MHz series
> probably puts us in a worse state than we started with, so I was just
> proposing reverting the one patch. Once we do that, this PHY patch
> helps keep us in a sane state (keeps suspend/resume working).
>
>
> -Doug
Doug, Kishon,
Did you agree on how to move forward with this change?
Kind regards
Uffe
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