[PATCH 4/7] phy: meson: add USB2 PHY support for Meson8b and GXBB

Martin Blumenstingl martin.blumenstingl at googlemail.com
Tue Sep 13 11:38:06 PDT 2016


Hi Philipp,

On Tue, Sep 13, 2016 at 5:28 PM, Philipp Zabel <p.zabel at pengutronix.de> wrote:
> Hi Martin,
>
> Am Freitag, den 09.09.2016, 22:36 +0200 schrieb Martin Blumenstingl:
>> On Fri, Sep 9, 2016 at 5:33 PM, Kevin Hilman <khilman at baylibre.com> wrote:
>> > Martin Blumenstingl <martin.blumenstingl at googlemail.com> writes:
>> >
>> >> On Thu, Sep 8, 2016 at 10:53 PM, Ben Dooks <ben.dooks at codethink.co.uk> wrote:
>> >>> On 08/09/16 21:42, Kevin Hilman wrote:
>> >>>>
>> >>>> Ben Dooks <ben.dooks at codethink.co.uk> writes:
>> >>>>
>> >>>>> On 08/09/16 20:52, Martin Blumenstingl wrote:
>> >>>>>>
>> >>>>>> On Thu, Sep 8, 2016 at 9:35 PM, Kevin Hilman <khilman at baylibre.com>
>> >>>>>> wrote:
>> >>>>>>>>
>> >>>>>>>> +     phy = devm_phy_create(&pdev->dev, NULL, &phy_meson_usb2_ops);
>> >>>>>>>> +     if (IS_ERR(phy)) {
>> >>>>>>>> +             dev_err(&pdev->dev, "failed to create PHY\n");
>> >>>>>>>> +             return PTR_ERR(phy);
>> >>>>>>>> +     }
>> >>>>>>>> +
>> >>>>>>>> +     if (usb_reset_refcnt++ == 0) {
>> >>>>>>>> +             ret = device_reset(&pdev->dev);
>> >>>>>>>> +             if (ret) {
>> >>>>>>>> +                     dev_err(&phy->dev, "Failed to reset USB PHY\n");
>> >>>>>>>> +                     return ret;
>> >>>>>>>> +             }
>> >>>>>>>> +     }
>> >>>>>>>
>> >>>>>>>
>> >>>>>>> The ref count + reset here looks like something that could/should be
>> >>>>>>> handled in a runtime PM callback.
>> >>>>>>
>> >>>>>> Unfortunately that doesn't work (as Jerome found out) because both
>> >>>>>> PHYs are sharing the same reset line.
>> >>>>>> So if the second PHY would call device_reset then it would also reset
>> >>>>>> the first PHY!
>> >>>>>>
>> >>>>>> There's a comment above the declaration of usb_reset_refcnt which
>> >>>>>> tries to explain this:
>> >>>>>> "The PHYs are sharing a common reset line -> we are only allowed to
>> >>>>>> reset once for all PHYs."
>> >>>>>> Maybe I should move this comment to the "if (usb_reset_refcnt++ == 0)
>> >>>>>> {" line to make it easier to see?
>> >>>>>>
>> >>>>>
>> >>>>> pm-runtime has refcounting in it. When one of the nodes turns on,
>> >>>>> the pm-runtime will call your driver to say there is a user when
>> >>>>> this first use turns up.
>> >>>>>
>> >>>>> If all the sub-phys turn off and drop their refcount then the driver
>> >>>>> is called to say there are no more users and you can go to sleep.
>> >>>>
>> >>>>
>> >>>> After a chat w/Martin on IRC, It turns out runtime PM wont help here.
>> >>>>
>> >>>> The reason is because there are physically two PHY devices[1].  Those 2
>> >>>> devices will be treated independely by runtime PM, and have separate
>> >>>> use-counting, which means doing what I proposed would cause a reset to
>> >>>> happen when either device was probed.
>> >>>>
>> >>>> So, I think it's OK as it is.
>> >>>
>> >>>
>> >>> Surely you can do pm_runtime_get/put on the phy's parent platform
>> >>> device and do it that way?
>> >> could you please be more specific with that (do you mean pdev->dev.parent)?
>> >> so we would use pm_runtime_{get_sync,put} with the parent, while we
>> >> would still define the runtime_resume in our driver.
>> >
>> > You'd also need to do get/put on the children, but yes, that's what Ben
>> > is suggesting.
>> >
>> > However, the problem with all of the solutions proposed (runtime PM ones
>> > included) is that we're forcing a board-specific design issue (2 devices
>> > sharing a reset line) into a driver that should not have any
>> > board-specific assumptions in it.
>> >
>> > For example, if this driver is used on another platform where different
>> > PHYs have different reset lines, then one of them (the unlucky one who
>> > is not probed first) will never get reset.  So any form of per-device
>> > ref-counting is not a portable solution.
>> indeed, so in simple words we would need something like
>> reset_control_do_once(rstc, RESET/ASSERT/DEASSERT) which would
>> remember internally if any action has already been executed: if not it
>> does a _reset, _assert or _deassert and otherwise it does nothing.
>>
>> > I'm not sure yet how the reset framework is supposed to handle shared
>> > reset lines, but that needs some investigation.  I quick glance and it
>> > seems that reset controllers can have shared lines, so that should be
>> > investigated.
>> I added Philipp and Hans to this thread - maybe they can comment on this.
>> To sum it up, our problem is:
>> - there are two separate USB PHYs on Meson GXBB
>> - both are sharing the same reset line (provided by the reset-meson driver)
>> - during initialization of the PHYs we must only call
>> reset_control_reset(rstc) once (if we do it for the first *and* second
>> PHY then the first PHY gets confused once the second PHY uses the
>> reset because the first PHY's state is reset as well)
>
> If you have an initially asserted reset line and you can enable the
> first module by deasserting the reset via reset_control_deassert (and
> reset_control_assert to signal when the module may be disabled again
> after use), shared resets are for you.
>
> If you need a reset pulse or have no direct control over the reset line,
> (device_reset), the reset framework currently has no solution for this.
> The ugly thing about reset_control_once would be that it can't re-reset
> modules when unloading and reloading driver modules.
The corresponding reset driver in question is reset-meson, which only
implements reset (assert/deassert are not implemented). However, I
don't know if this is due to hardware design.
I think the hardware implements the latter, but maybe Neil can give
more information here (I currently don't have access to my board so I
cannot test how the hardware actually behaves).

> A real solution for shared reset lines with reset pulses would have to
> be some kind of reset request framework where if one module requests a
> reset, the other module sharing the reset could be notified, and then
> either veto the reset or, if possible, cease operations, store its
> state, and prepare to be reset, too, and afterwards restore state. I'd
> prefer not to think about this too much unless absolutely necessary.
I'm not sure if this would work in our case: one PHY instance would
have to know if the other has already triggered the reset or not.


Regards,
Martin



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