[PATCH] drivers: pwm: pwm-atmel: implement suspend/resume functions

Claudiu Beznea Claudiu.Beznea at microchip.com
Thu Jan 11 05:51:13 PST 2018



On 05.12.2017 11:06, Thierry Reding wrote:
> On Tue, Apr 11, 2017 at 11:53:11AM +0200, Boris Brezillon wrote:
>> On Tue, 11 Apr 2017 12:41:59 +0300
>> m18063 <Claudiu.Beznea at microchip.com> wrote:
>>
>>> On 11.04.2017 11:56, Boris Brezillon wrote:
>>>> On Tue, 11 Apr 2017 11:22:39 +0300
>>>> m18063 <Claudiu.Beznea at microchip.com> wrote:
>>>>   
>>>>> Hi Boris,
>>>>>
>>>>> On 10.04.2017 17:35, Boris Brezillon wrote:  
>>>>>> On Mon, 10 Apr 2017 17:20:20 +0300
>>>>>> Claudiu Beznea <claudiu.beznea at microchip.com> wrote:
>>>>>>     
>>>>>>> Implement suspend and resume power management specific
>>>>>>> function to allow PWM controller to correctly suspend
>>>>>>> and resume.
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> Signed-off-by: Claudiu Beznea <claudiu.beznea at microchip.com>
>>>>>>> ---
>>>>>>>  drivers/pwm/pwm-atmel.c | 81 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
>>>>>>>  1 file changed, 81 insertions(+)
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> diff --git a/drivers/pwm/pwm-atmel.c b/drivers/pwm/pwm-atmel.c
>>>>>>> index 530d7dc..75177c6 100644
>>>>>>> --- a/drivers/pwm/pwm-atmel.c
>>>>>>> +++ b/drivers/pwm/pwm-atmel.c
>>>>>>> @@ -58,6 +58,8 @@
>>>>>>>  #define PWM_MAX_PRD		0xFFFF
>>>>>>>  #define PRD_MAX_PRES		10
>>>>>>>  
>>>>>>> +#define PWM_MAX_CH_NUM		(4)
>>>>>>> +
>>>>>>>  struct atmel_pwm_registers {
>>>>>>>  	u8 period;
>>>>>>>  	u8 period_upd;
>>>>>>> @@ -65,11 +67,18 @@ struct atmel_pwm_registers {
>>>>>>>  	u8 duty_upd;
>>>>>>>  };
>>>>>>>  
>>>>>>> +struct atmel_pwm_pm_ctx {
>>>>>>> +	u32 cmr;
>>>>>>> +	u32 cdty;
>>>>>>> +	u32 cprd;
>>>>>>> +};
>>>>>>> +
>>>>>>>  struct atmel_pwm_chip {
>>>>>>>  	struct pwm_chip chip;
>>>>>>>  	struct clk *clk;
>>>>>>>  	void __iomem *base;
>>>>>>>  	const struct atmel_pwm_registers *regs;
>>>>>>> +	struct atmel_pwm_pm_ctx ctx[PWM_MAX_CH_NUM];    
>>>>>>
>>>>>> Hm, I'm pretty sure you can rely on the current PWM state and call
>>>>>> atmel_pwm_apply() at resume time instead of doing that. See what I did
>>>>>> here [1].    
>>>>>
>>>>> I agree with the approach you propose but the thing is the atmel_pwm_apply()
>>>>> take care of both, current PWM state and the new state received as argument
>>>>> in order to change only duty factor without disabling the PWM channel (if
>>>>> channel is enabled) and then returns. Changing PWM duty and period and polarity
>>>>> in the same step without disabling + enabling the PWM channel (with atomic
>>>>> approach) may lead to intermediary unwanted output waveforms (the IP doesn't
>>>>> support this for ordinary PWM channels). To take advantage of atmel_pwm_apply()
>>>>> (in the formit is today) in resume() hook might need to first call it to disable
>>>>> channel and then to enable it. Or atmel_pwm_apply() should be changed to also
>>>>> disable + enable the channel when user changes the duty factor at runtime.  
>>>>
>>>> Nope. Just save the state at suspend time, implement ->get_state() and
>>>> use it to retrieve the real PWM state when resuming before restoring
>>>> the state you saved during suspend.  
>>> Ok.
>>>> But anyway, as Thierry explained, I'm not sure we should take the
>>>> 're-apply PWM state' action here. It's probably better to leave this
>>>> decision to the PWM user.   
>>> Do you thinks we should proceed with restoring the registers behind
>>> the re-apply as other drivers does at this moment?
>>
>> Nope. IMO we'd better start patching PWM users to restore the states
>> rather than supporting suspend/resume in all PWM drivers.
>>
>> Thierry, what's your opinion?
> 
> I just noticed this thread while cleaning up patchwork. I think I had
> already mentioned in an earlier reply that in my opinion we should leave
> PWM suspend/resume to users.
What about the case where PWM was requested via sysfs?
> 
> I'm totally fine if we add helpers to the PWM core to help with that
> task. Maybe something like this would work:
> 
> 	void pwm_suspend(struct pwm_device *pwm)
> 	{
> 		pwm_get_state(pwm, &pwm->suspend);
> 		pwm_disable(pwm);
> 	}
> 
> 	void pwm_resume(struct pwm_device *pwm)
> 	{
> 		pwm_apply_state(pwm, &pwm->suspend);
> 	}
> 
> Though, quite frankly, this is so trivial that drivers could just do
> that themselves. Also, the helpers above aren't flexible at all with
> respect to any special sequences the PWM might need to go through on
> suspend. I suspect that this doesn't matter at all in most cases but
> given how trivial they are we might as well just make drivers do it.
> Also we don't burden users that don't care about suspend/resume with
> the extra suspend state in struct pwm_device.
> 
> Thierry
> 



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