[PATCH 02/10] PM / devfreq: Do not require devices to have OPPs
Samuel Holland
samuel at sholland.org
Thu Sep 30 18:45:33 PDT 2021
On 9/30/21 8:59 PM, Chanwoo Choi wrote:
> On 9/30/21 8:37 PM, Samuel Holland wrote:
>> On 9/29/21 11:19 PM, Chanwoo Choi wrote:
>>> Hi Samuel,
>>>
>>>
>>> On 9/29/21 1:42 PM, Samuel Holland wrote:
>>>> Since commit ea572f816032 ("PM / devfreq: Change return type of
>>>> devfreq_set_freq_table()"), all devfreq devices are required to have a
>>>> valid freq_table. If freq_table is not provided by the driver, it will
>>>> be filled in by set_freq_table() from the OPPs; if that fails,
>>>> devfreq_add_device() will return an error.
>>>>
>>>> However, since commit ab8f58ad72c4 ("PM / devfreq: Set min/max_freq when
>>>> adding the devfreq device"), devfreq devices are _also_ required to have
>>>> an OPP table, even if they provide freq_table. devfreq_add_device()
>>>> requires dev_pm_opp_find_freq_ceil() and dev_pm_opp_find_freq_floor() to
>>>> return successfully, specifically to initialize scaling_min/max_freq.
>>>>
>>>> Not all drivers need an OPP table. For example, a driver where all
>>>> frequencies are determined dynamically could work by filling out only
>>>> freq_table. But with the current code it must call dev_pm_opp_add() on
>>>> every freq_table entry to probe successfully.
>>>
>>> As you commented, if device has no opp table, it should call dev_pm_opp_add().
>>> The devfreq have to use OPP for controlling the frequency/regulator.
>>>
>>> Actually, I want that all devfreq driver uses the OPP as default way.
>>
>> The current code/documentation implies that an OPP table is intended to
>> be optional. For example:
>>
>> * struct devfreq - Device devfreq structure
>> ...
>> * @opp_table: Reference to OPP table of dev.parent, if one exists.
>>
>> So this should be updated if an OPP table is no longer optional.
>
> Right. Need to update it.
>
>>
>>> Are there any reason why don't use the OPP table?
>>
>> dev_pm_opp_add() takes a voltage, and assumes the existence of some
>> voltage regulator, but there is none involved here. The only way to have
>> an OPP table without regulators is to use a static table in the
>> devicetree. But that also doesn't make much sense, because the OPPs
>> aren't actually customizable; they are integer dividers from a fixed
>> base clock.
>
> You can use OPP for only clock control without regulator. OPP already
> provides them. OPP already provides the helpful function which
> implement the functions to handle the clock/regulator or power doamin.
> It is useful framework to control clock/regulator.
>
> If the standard framework in Linux kernel, it is best to use
> this framework in order to remove the duplicate codes on multiple
> device drivers. It is one of advantage of Linux kernel.
>
> Also, if OPP doesn't support the some requirement of you,
> you can contribute and update the OPP.
>
> And adding a fixed OPP table to each board would be a lot of
>> work to replace a trivial loop in the driver. So it seems to be the
>> wrong abstraction.
>
> I don't understand. As I commented for patch 10, you can add
> the OPP entry of the clock without the fixed OPP table in devicetree.
>
>>
>> Using an OPP table adds extra complexity (memory allocations, error
>> cases), just to duplicate the list of frequencies that already has to
>> exist in freq_table. And the driver works fine without any of that.
>
> 'freq_table' of devfreq was developed before of adding OPP interface to Linux kernel as I knew. Actually, I prefer to use the OPP interface
> instead of initializing the freq_table directly by device driver.
> I just keep the 'freq_table' for preventing the build/working issue
> for older device driver. I think OPP is enough to control frequency/voltage
> and it provides the various helper funcitons for user of OPP.
Thanks for the explanation. I will convert the driver to use
dev_pm_opp_add(), and I will drop patches 2 and 4. I think patch 3 is
still worth considering.
Regards,
Samuel
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