[PATCH v1 08/11] clk: move meson clk-regmap implementation to common code
Conor Dooley
conor at kernel.org
Fri Dec 6 05:56:08 PST 2024
On Tue, Dec 03, 2024 at 02:50:31PM -0800, Stephen Boyd wrote:
> Quoting Conor Dooley (2024-11-28 02:36:16)
> > On Thu, Nov 14, 2024 at 05:29:54PM -0800, Stephen Boyd wrote:
> > > Quoting Conor Dooley (2024-11-06 04:56:25)
> > > > My use case doesn't
> > > > actually need the registration code changes either as, currently, only reg
> > > > gets set at runtime, but leaving that out is a level of incomplete I'd not
> > > > let myself away with.
> > > > Obviously shoving the extra members into the clk structs has the downside
> > > > of taking up a pointer and a offset worth of memory for each clock of
> > > > that type registered, but it is substantially easier to support devices
> > > > with multiple regmaps that way. Probably moot though since the approach you
> > > > suggested in the thread linked above that implements a clk_hw_get_regmap()
> > > > has to store a pointer to the regmap's identifier which would take up an
> > > > identical amount of memory.
> > >
> > > We don't need to store the regmap identifier in the struct clk. We can
> > > store it in the 'struct clk_init_data' with some new field, and only do
> > > that when/if we actually need to. We would need to pass the init data to
> > > the clk_ops::init() callback though. We currently knock that out during
> > > registration so that clk_hw->init is NULL. Probably we can just set that
> > > to NULL after the init routine runs in __clk_core_init().
> > >
> > > Long story short, don't add something to 'struct clk_core', 'struct
> > > clk', or 'struct clk_hw' for these details. We can have a 'struct
> > > clk_regmap_hw' that everyone else can build upon:
> > >
> > > struct clk_regmap_hw {
> > > struct regmap *regmap;
> > > struct clk_hw hw;
> > > };
> >
> > What's the point of this? I don't understand why you want to do this over
> > what clk_divider et al already do, where clk_hw and the iomem pointer
> > are in the struct itself.
>
> Can you give an example? I don't understand what you're suggesting. I
> prefer a struct clk_regmap_hw like above so that the existing struct
> clk_hw in the kernel aren't increased by a pointer. SoC drivers can use
> the same struct as a replacement for their struct clk_hw member today.
Best example I guess is to link what I did? This one is the core
changes:
https://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/conor/linux.git/commit/?h=syscon-rework-2&id=35904222355e971c24b3eb9b9fad3dd0c38d1393
clk-gate has my original hack that I did while trying to figure out
what you wanted, clk-divider-regmap is a 99% copy of clk-divider with
the types, function names and readl()/writel() implementations modified.
Before your last set of comments I was doing something identical to the
clk-gate change for clk-divider also.
Here's the changes required to my driver to make it work with the
updated:
https://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/conor/linux.git/commit/?h=syscon-rework-2&id=ea40211fe20f8bc6ef0320b93e1baa5b3f244601
It's pretty much a drop in replacement, other than the additional
complexity in probe.
Hopefully that either gets my point across or lets you spot why I don't
understand the benefit of a wrapper around clk_hw.
Cheers,
Conor.
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