[PATCH v2 2/3] thermal: spacemit: k1: Add thermal sensor support

Yao Zi me at ziyao.cc
Tue Dec 16 02:29:27 PST 2025


On Tue, Dec 16, 2025 at 10:00:36AM +0800, Shuwei Wu wrote:
> The thermal sensor on K1 supports monitoring five temperature zones.
> The driver registers these sensors with the thermal framework
> and supports standard operations:
> - Reading temperature (millidegree Celsius)
> - Setting high/low thresholds for interrupts
> 
> Signed-off-by: Shuwei Wu <shuweiwoo at 163.com>
> ---
> Changes in v2:
> - Rename k1_thermal.c to k1_tsensor.c for better hardware alignment
> - Move driver to drivers/thermal/spacemit/
> - Add Kconfig/Makefile for spacemit and update top-level build files
> - Refactor names, style, code alignment, and comments
> - Simplify probe and error handling
> ---
>  drivers/thermal/Kconfig               |   2 +
>  drivers/thermal/Makefile              |   1 +
>  drivers/thermal/spacemit/Kconfig      |  19 +++
>  drivers/thermal/spacemit/Makefile     |   3 +
>  drivers/thermal/spacemit/k1_tsensor.c | 283 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
>  5 files changed, 308 insertions(+)

...

> diff --git a/drivers/thermal/spacemit/k1_tsensor.c b/drivers/thermal/spacemit/k1_tsensor.c
> new file mode 100644
> index 0000000000000000000000000000000000000000..f164754e807ddd311c8cf98bcc074fd580514aa2
> --- /dev/null
> +++ b/drivers/thermal/spacemit/k1_tsensor.c
> @@ -0,0 +1,283 @@

...

> +/*
> + * For each sensor, the hardware threshold register is 32 bits:
> + * - Lower 16 bits [15:0] configure the low threshold temperature.
> + * - Upper 16 bits [31:16] configure the high threshold temperature.
> + */
> +static int k1_tsensor_set_trips(struct thermal_zone_device *tz, int low, int high)
> +{
> +	struct k1_tsensor_channel *ch = thermal_zone_device_priv(tz);
> +	struct k1_tsensor *ts = ch->ts;
> +	int high_code = high;
> +	int low_code = low;

Since high_code and low_code are used to bit operations, please define
them as unsigned types. u32 would be pretty fine here.

Also, you could avoid the initialization of high_code and low_code
here...

> +	u32 val;
> +
> +	if (low >= high)
> +		return -EINVAL;
> +
> +	if (low < 0)
> +		low_code = 0;

... if you change this if to

	if (low < 0)
		low = 0;

...

> +	high_code = high_code / 1000 + TEMPERATURE_OFFSET;
> +	low_code = low_code / 1000 + TEMPERATURE_OFFSET;

... and re-write the right side of the assignments to use high/low
instead.

> +	val = readl(ts->base + K1_TSENSOR_THRSH_REG(ch->id));
> +	val &= ~K1_TSENSOR_THRSH_HIGH_MASK;
> +	val |= FIELD_PREP(K1_TSENSOR_THRSH_HIGH_MASK, high_code);
> +
> +	val &= ~K1_TSENSOR_THRSH_LOW_MASK;
> +	val |= FIELD_PREP(K1_TSENSOR_THRSH_LOW_MASK, low_code);
> +	writel(val, ts->base + K1_TSENSOR_THRSH_REG(ch->id));
> +
> +	return 0;
> +}

...

> +static int k1_tsensor_probe(struct platform_device *pdev)
> +{
> +	struct device *dev = &pdev->dev;
> +	struct k1_tsensor *ts;
> +	struct reset_control *reset;
> +	struct clk *clk, *bus_clk;

You could drop bus_clk here, and re-use clk to retrieve the return value
of devm_clk_get_enabled(dev, "bus"), which also saves you some
characters.

...

> +	clk = devm_clk_get_enabled(dev, "core");
> +	if (IS_ERR(clk))
> +		return dev_err_probe(dev, PTR_ERR(clk), "Failed to get core clock\n");

clk isn't used anywhere later, so overriding its value is fine.

> +	bus_clk = devm_clk_get_enabled(dev, "bus");
> +	if (IS_ERR(bus_clk))
> +		return dev_err_probe(dev, PTR_ERR(bus_clk), "Failed to get bus clock\n");
> +
> +			return PTR_ERR(ts->ch[i].tzd);

Regards,
Yao Zi



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