[PATCH RESEND] pwm: ftm: fix clock enable/disable when using PM

Stefan Agner stefan at agner.ch
Mon Nov 23 13:40:43 PST 2015


Thanks Thierry for looking into that!

Added Li as recipient to start discussion.

Some comments below:

On 2015-11-23 01:45, Thierry Reding wrote:
> On Wed, Nov 18, 2015 at 06:04:12PM -0800, Stefan Agner wrote:
>> Thierry,
>>
>> I realized that this patch did not make it into 4.4-rc1, while others,
>> IMHO less important patches which have been posted later (e.g. sunxi
>> whitespace fixes) have made it! :-(
> 
> The reason why I merged them is because they are low-risk, whereas this
> patch of yours changes existing behaviour, and hasn't received any
> feedback from anyone. So the choice that I need to make is to either
> trust the original author to have tested the driver and it was working,
> or you to have verified that it is still working after the patch on all
> setups that it used to work on. The first option obviously carries the
> least risk, and that's the reason why the patch hasn't been merged.
> 
>> Anything wrong with that? Or am I on your spam list? Note that this is
>> already a RESEND :-)
> 
> If you want to get this merged, you should try to get some feedback from
> at least the original author. Xiubo Li and I extensively discussed this
> back at the time when he submitted the driver and we came up with the
> current code as the best approach to making sure that clocks are on and
> off when they should be. So if it's not working for you, I'm fine taking
> the patch if Xiubo or somebody else has had the chance to look at it and
> review or test it. So a Reviewed-by or Tested-by tag will go a long way
> to convince me that it's safe to apply.

In mainline, the driver is only used in Freescale Vybrid device trees. I
think most issues have been introduced with the patches adding suspend
support:
http://thread.gmane.org/gmane.linux.kernel/1806940

Not sure against what suspend/resume implementation Li created the
patches, so far there is no suspend/resume implementation for Vybrid
upstream. While working on Vybrid's low power mode LPSTOP3, I noticed
the issues....
 
> Also you enumerate all the various bits that are broken, and it would
> seem to me that they could each be fixed individually rather than go and
> implement something completely different which might have undesirable
> side-effects. Such an approach would also make it more likely for me to
> merge the patch because it would hopefully be more obvious what is being
> fixed and that it's a correct fix.

There are different issues addressed by one solution: Using the clock
frameworks enable/disable counts... I looked through the code again, it
is really quite hard to split it up. I could create one patch which only
switches the PWM enable/disable part to clock framework counts, and
leave the suspend/resume part broken. Than, in a second patch fix the
suspend/resume part. But that sounds like the wrong approach to me
too...

I took inspiration from other PWM drivers, I think the suspend/resume
idea was from TI EHRPWM PWM driver. So this shouldn't be far off what
others are doing.

> 
> It's not that I mind the rework, but I'd at least like for someone to
> verify that it's all still working on existing setups. Now, I understand
> that people can go missing, so if nobody were to give you a Reviewed-by
> or Tested-by for a couple of weeks I'd even consider applying without,
> but as it is, you didn't even Cc Xiubo on the patch, so he's likely
> missed it entirely.

I have had Li in the initial email, don't know/remember why I removed
him from the list in RESEND...  Will keep him in the loop.

Just realized that there is now a helper function for
test_bit(PWMF_ENABLED,... Will send a v2 anyway then.

--
Stefan



More information about the linux-arm-kernel mailing list