[PATCH] clk: amlogic: axg-audio: select RESET_MESON_AUX

Stephen Boyd sboyd at kernel.org
Tue Dec 3 12:21:52 PST 2024


Quoting Arnd Bergmann (2024-12-03 04:43:03)
> On Tue, Dec 3, 2024, at 03:53, Stephen Boyd wrote:
> > Quoting Arnd Bergmann (2024-11-28 07:34:46)
> >> On Thu, Nov 28, 2024, at 16:06, Jerome Brunet wrote:
> >> Stephen, can you please take a look here and see if you
> >> have a better idea for either decoupling the two drivers
> >> enough to avoid the link time dependency, or to reintegrate
> >> the reset controller code into the clk driver and avoid
> >> the complexity?
> >
> > I think the best approach is to add the reset auxilary device with a
> > function that creates the auxiliary device directly by string name and
> > does nothing else. Maybe we can have some helper in the auxiliary
> > layer that does that all for us, because it's quite a bit of boiler
> > plate that we need to write over and over again. Something like:
> >
> >   int devm_auxiliary_device_create(struct device *parent, const char *name)
> >
> > that does the whole kzalloc() + ida dance that
> > devm_meson_rst_aux_register() is doing today and wraps it all up so that
> > the device is removed when the parent driver unbinds. Then this clk
> > driver can register the reset device with a single call and not need to
> > do anything besides select AUXILIARY_BUS. The regmap can be acquired
> > from the parent device in the auxiliary driver probe with
> > dev_get_regmap(adev->parent).
> 
> I like the idea. Two questions about the interface:
> 
>  - should there be a 'void *platform_data' argument anyway?
>    Even if this can be looked up from the parent, it seems
>    useful enough

Sure. Probably that can be added as some variant like
devm_auxiliary_device_create_pdata() when/if it's needed.

> 
>  - What is the scope of the 'ida' number? My impression was
>    this should be local to one parent device, but I don't
>    know how the number is used in the end, so maybe a global
>    number allocator is sufficient.
> 

>From what I can tell it's only used for the device name and not for
driver matching. That's probably to make it so we don't get conflicts in
sysfs with devices because they all share the same bus. I'd guess that a
global allocator is sufficient.



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