[PATCH] ARM: omap2+: Revert omap-smp.c changes resetting cpu1 during boot

Tony Lindgren tony at atomide.com
Thu Feb 16 08:10:10 PST 2017


* Tony Lindgren <tony at atomide.com> [170215 14:28]:
> * Andrew F. Davis <afd at ti.com> [170215 14:14]:
> > On 02/15/2017 01:12 PM, Tony Lindgren wrote:
> > > And also the same issue happens doing kexec on beagle-x15 naturally if
> > > the cpu1 reset is removed.
> > > 
> > 
> > When a core actually powers up it idles in ROM code waiting for
> > OMAP_AUX_CORE_BOOT_0 to be set. When we shutdown a core it is not really
> > powered off, we just let it spin in omap4_cpu_die() or
> > omap4_secondary_startup() waiting on OMAP_AUX_CORE_BOOT_0, just like if
> > it were still trapped in ROM after a reset.

OK so I debugged this a bit more. We have CPU1 in omap_do_wfi()
as we don't currently have omap5_secondary_startup() or any deeper
idle mode support beyond retention for omap5 or dra7 in the mainline
kernel.

> > The issue with this fake startup idle loop is that, unlike the ROM based
> > startup idle loop, these do *not* jump to the address we stored in
> > OMAP_AUX_CORE_BOOT_1, they just make the assumption that they can safely
> > jump to the kernel startup function.

This does not seem to be the case here.

> > So when we tell this core to boot, and it is not in the real ROM startup
> > loop, it breaks stuff as it jumps to the old kernel's
> > secondary_startup() even though we gave it the correct address in
> > OMAP_AUX_CORE_BOOT_1.

And this is not happening. I think this is what I was seeing earlier,
but it's not the omap5/dra7 issue.

What we have is cpu1 returning from previous kernel's omap_do_wfi()
in the kexec booted kernel's code and that's when things go wrong.

So if cpu1 was configured for idle for any reason, it will never gets
to omap5_secondary_startup without the reset currently.

The reason kexec and suspend/resume mostly works for omap4 without
cpu1 reset is that we usually enter off mode for cpu1 and the context
is lost and then we properly go through omap4_secondary_startup. Or
that's my theory so far for the occasional flakeyness I've been seeing :)

Any ideas what we should try to check to see if cpu1 is in idle
mode so we can do the reset if needed?

Regards,

Tony



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