[PATCH v8 07/34] clk: tegra: Support runtime PM and power domain

Dmitry Osipenko digetx at gmail.com
Mon Aug 23 11:54:41 PDT 2021


23.08.2021 17:33, Thierry Reding пишет:
> On Sat, Aug 21, 2021 at 08:45:54PM +0300, Dmitry Osipenko wrote:
>> 20.08.2021 16:08, Ulf Hansson пишет:
>> ...
>>>> I suppose if there's really no good way of doing this other than
>>>> providing a struct device, then so be it. I think the cleaned up sysfs
>>>> shown in the summary above looks much better than what the original
>>>> would've looked like.
>>>>
>>>> Perhaps an additional tweak to that would be to not create platform
>>>> devices. Instead, just create struct device. Those really have
>>>> everything you need (.of_node, and can be used with RPM and GENPD). As I
>>>> mentioned earlier, platform device implies a CPU-memory-mapped bus,
>>>> which this clearly isn't. It's kind of a separate "bus" if you want, so
>>>> just using struct device directly seems more appropriate.
>>>
>>> Just a heads up. If you don't use a platform device or have a driver
>>> associated with it for probing, you need to manage the attachment to
>>> genpd yourself. That means calling one of the dev_pm_domain_attach*()
>>> APIs, but that's perfectly fine, ofcourse.
>>>
>>>>
>>>> We did something similar for XUSB pads, see drivers/phy/tegra/xusb.[ch]
>>>> for an example of how that was done. I think you can do something
>>>> similar here.
>>
>> We need a platform device because we have a platform device driver that
>> must be bound to the device, otherwise PMC driver state won't be synced
>> since it it's synced after all drivers of devices that reference PMC
>> node in DT are probed.
> 
> I think the causality is the wrong way around. It's more likely that you
> added the platform driver because you have a platform device that you
> want to bind against.
> 
> You can have drivers bind to other types of devices, although it's a bit
> more work than abusing platform devices for it.
> 
> There's the "auxiliary" bus that seems like it would be a somewhat
> better fit (see Documentation/driver-api/auxiliary_bus.rst), though it
> doesn't look like this fits the purpose exactly. I think a custom bus
> (or perhaps something that could be deployed more broadly across CCF)
> would be more appropriate.
> 
> Looking around, it seems like clk/imx and clk/samsung abuse the platform
> bus in a similar way, so they would benefit from a "clk" bus as well.

It may be nice to have a dedicated clk bus, but this is too much effort
for nearly nothing in our case. It shouldn't be a problem to convert
drivers to use clk bus once it will be implemented. It shouldn't be a
part of this series, IMO.



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