[PATCH v2 10/11] phy: rockchip-emmc: Set phyctrl_frqsel based on card clock
Heiko Stübner
heiko at sntech.de
Sat Jun 18 05:20:45 PDT 2016
Am Montag, 13. Juni 2016, 16:04:34 schrieb Douglas Anderson:
> The "phyctrl_frqsel" is described in the Arasan datasheet [1] as "the
> frequency range of DLL operation". Although the Rockchip variant of
> this PHY has different ranges than the reference Arasan PHY it appears
> as if the functionality is similar. We should set this phyctrl field
> properly.
>
> Note: as per Rockchip engineers, apparently the "phyctrl_frqsel" is
> actually only useful in HS200 / HS400 modes even though the DLL itself
> it used for some purposes in all modes. See the discussion in the
> earlier change in this series: ("mmc: sdhci-of-arasan: Always power the
> PHY off/on when clock changes"). In any case, it shouldn't hurt to set
> this always.
>
> Note that this change should allow boards to run at HS200 / HS400 speed
> modes while running at 100 MHz or 150 MHz. In fact, running HS400 at
> 150 MHz (giving 300 MB/s) is the main motivation of this series, since
> performance is still good but signal integrity problems are less
> prevelant at 150 MHz.
>
> [1]: https://arasan.com/wp-content/media/eMMC-5-1-Total-Solution_Rev-1-3.pdf
>
> Signed-off-by: Douglas Anderson <dianders at chromium.org>
> ---
> Changes in v2:
> - Warn if we're more than 15 MHz from ideal rate (Shawn)
> - Move code cleanup before set phyctrl_frqsel based on card clock (Shawn)
> - Fix typo USB => SDHCI (Shawn)
>
> drivers/phy/phy-rockchip-emmc.c | 82
> ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++------- 1 file changed, 69 insertions(+),
> 13 deletions(-)
>
> diff --git a/drivers/phy/phy-rockchip-emmc.c
> b/drivers/phy/phy-rockchip-emmc.c index 23fe50864526..51ddd543fd04 100644
> --- a/drivers/phy/phy-rockchip-emmc.c
> +++ b/drivers/phy/phy-rockchip-emmc.c
> @@ -14,6 +14,7 @@
> * GNU General Public License for more details.
> */
>
> +#include <linux/clk.h>
> #include <linux/delay.h>
> #include <linux/mfd/syscon.h>
> #include <linux/module.h>
> @@ -78,16 +79,73 @@
> struct rockchip_emmc_phy {
> unsigned int reg_offset;
> struct regmap *reg_base;
> + struct clk *emmcclk;
> };
>
> -static int rockchip_emmc_phy_power(struct rockchip_emmc_phy *rk_phy,
> - bool on_off)
> +static int rockchip_emmc_phy_power(struct phy *phy, bool on_off)
> {
> + struct rockchip_emmc_phy *rk_phy = phy_get_drvdata(phy);
> unsigned int caldone;
> unsigned int dllrdy;
> + unsigned int freqsel = PHYCTRL_FREQSEL_200M;
> unsigned long timeout;
>
> /*
> + * We purposely get the clock here and not in probe to avoid the
> + * circular dependency problem. We expect:
> + * - PHY driver to probe
> + * - SDHCI driver to start probe
> + * - SDHCI driver to register it's clock
> + * - SDHCI driver to get the PHY
> + * - SDHCI driver to power on the PHY
> + */
Doesn't that leave open the unbind / removal case with that same circular
dependency? While true that the clock-framework does some special handling on
clk_unregister, I don't think this would catch multiple unbind/bind actions.
The emmc-phy would still hold on to the old clock-instance with the empty clk-
ops the ccf assigns, even when the rebind of the arasan-sdhci would create a
new clock.
How about using phy-init / phy-exit callbacks for that instead? (Aka clk_get
and clk_put the emmc clock in there instead of using the devm variant)
> + if (!rk_phy->emmcclk) {
> + rk_phy->emmcclk = devm_clk_get(&phy->dev, "emmcclk");
> +
> + /* Don't expect defer at this point; try next time */
> + if (PTR_ERR(rk_phy->emmcclk) == -EPROBE_DEFER) {
> + dev_warn(&phy->dev, "Unexpected emmcclk defer\n");
> + rk_phy->emmcclk = NULL;
> + }
> + }
> +
> + if (!IS_ERR_OR_NULL(rk_phy->emmcclk)) {
you just made it NULL in the error case above?
Heiko
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