[PATCH 9/9] clk: imx: add imx7ulp clk driver
Stephen Boyd
sboyd at codeaurora.org
Fri Jun 30 17:35:11 PDT 2017
On 06/21, A.s. Dong wrote:
> > -----Original Message-----
> > From: Stephen Boyd [mailto:sboyd at codeaurora.org]
> > Sent: Wednesday, June 21, 2017 4:42 AM
> > To: Dong Aisheng
> > Cc: A.s. Dong; linux-clk at vger.kernel.org; linux-kernel at vger.kernel.org;
> > linux-arm-kernel at lists.infradead.org; mturquette at baylibre.com;
> > shawnguo at kernel.org; Anson Huang; Jacky Bai
> > Subject: Re: [PATCH 9/9] clk: imx: add imx7ulp clk driver
> >
> > On 06/20, Dong Aisheng wrote:
> > > On Mon, Jun 19, 2017 at 07:01:19PM -0700, Stephen Boyd wrote:
> > > >
> > > > Any reason why it can't be a platform driver? If not, please add
> > > > some comment explaining why.
> > > >
> > >
> > > Timer is using it at early stage. GIC seems not although standard
> > > binding claim possible clock requirement.
> > > Others still not sure.
> > >
> > > What your suggestion?
> > > Convert timer to platform driver and make clock as platform driver as
> > well?
> > >
> >
> > The timer can't be a platform driver because it would be too late. The
> > clock driver could register whatever clks are required for the timer/GIC
> > in a CLK_OF_DECLARE_DRIVER hook, and then leave the rest to a platform
> > driver. This way we get some of the device driver framework in this code.
> >
>
> Okay, I could try it. Thanks.
>
> One thing is that TPM clock has a lot parents and parents having parents,
> as well as PIT timer. So I may need enable more than half clocks in
> CLK_OF_DECLARE_DRIVER hook.
That's fine.
>
> BTW, What's benefit to convert into two parts of probe?
> I'm not quite if I already get it all, can you help clarify it?
>
The benefit is that we still get a platform driver and we can
associate a device pointer with the clock controller eventually.
Here's a reply I sent yesterday on the same topic:
Reasons (in no particular order):
1. We get a dev pointer to use with clk_hw_register()
2. We can handle probe defer if some resource is not available
3. Using device model gets us a hook into power management frameworks
like runtime PM and system PM for things like suspend and hibernate
4. It encourages a single DT node clk controller style binding
instead of a single node per clk style binding
5. We can use non-DT specific functions like devm_ioremap_resource() to map
registers and acquire other resources, leading to more portable and
generic code
6. We may be able to make the device driver a module, which will
make distros happy if we don't have to compile in all
these clk drivers to the resulting vmlinux (this one doesn't
apply here)
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