Mark
Thanks for the review
On 07/07/2014 03:08 AM, Mark Brown wrote:
> On Thu, Jul 03, 2014 at 11:24:35AM -0500, Dan Murphy wrote:
>
>> +static int tas2552_power(struct tas2552_data *data, u8 power)
>> +{
>> + int ret = 0;
>> +
>> + mutex_lock(&data->mutex);
>> +
>> + if (power) {
>> + if (data->enable_gpio)
>> + gpiod_set_value(data->enable_gpio, 1);
>> +
>> + data->power_state = 1;
>> + } else {
>> + if (data->enable_gpio)
>> + gpiod_set_value(data->enable_gpio, 0);
>> +
>> + data->power_state = 0;
>> + }
>> +
>> + mutex_unlock(&data->mutex);
>> + return ret;
>> +}
> I don't understand this function. It appears to be the only place where
> either power_state or mutex is used so it's just adding some wrapping
> around setting the GPIO value which doesn't seem like it's doing much.
> Why are we tracking power_state?
This function and mutex are artifacts from the development and probably can be consolidated
into the runtime PM calls.
>
>> +static void tas2552_sw_shutdown(struct tas2552_data *tas_data, int sw_shutdown)
>> +{
>> + u8 cfg1_reg = 0x0;
>> +
>> + if (sw_shutdown)
>> + cfg1_reg |= TAS2552_SWS_MASK;
>> + else
>> + cfg1_reg &= ~TAS2552_SWS_MASK;
>> +
>> + snd_soc_update_bits(tas_data->codec, TAS2552_CFG_1,
>> + TAS2552_SWS_MASK, cfg1_reg);
> Given that you're using _update_bits() clearing the bits in a register
> that was just initialised to zero doesn't make a huge amount of sense.
This was an artifact from RFC in which I was not using the snd_soc functions.
I can remove the initialization of the variable.
>
>> + default:
>> + dev_vdbg(codec->dev, "Substream sample rate is not found\n");
>> + return -EINVAL;
>> + }
> Better to print the rate.
OK
>
>> + pm_runtime_get_sync(codec->dev);
>> +
>> + snd_soc_update_bits(codec, TAS2552_CFG_3, TAS2552_WCLK_MASK, wclk_reg);
>> +
>> + pm_runtime_put(codec->dev);
> This seems really strange - why is the device being powered up to just
> set a bit and then potentially powered down immediately? I'd expect to
> just update the cache if the device is not active. You're also not
> checking that the power up worked.
I wanted to make sure that the device was on. I totally forgot that
the device was using regmap and the values are cached when the device
is not on.
I can remove the get/put around the update calls.
>
>> +
>> +static int tas2552_set_dai_fmt(struct snd_soc_dai *dai, unsigned int fmt)
>> +{
>> + u8 serial_format;
>> + u8 serial_control_mask = 0x00;
>> + if (fmt & SND_SOC_DAIFMT_FORMAT_MASK)
>> + serial_control_mask |= TAS2552_DATA_FORMAT_MASK;
>> + if (serial_control_mask) {
>> + pm_runtime_get_sync(codec->dev);
>> +
>> + snd_soc_update_bits(codec, TAS2552_SER_CTRL_1, serial_control_mask,
>> + serial_format);
>> +
>> + pm_runtime_put(codec->dev);
>> + }
> This seems broken - if the format mask ever gets set then it won't be
> cleared since we only do an update_bits() if the bit is being set. Why
> isn't the driver just doing an _update_bits()?
I do not understand what this statement means.
Are you saying snd_soc_update_bits will not clear the bit if the bit mask
is set appropriately?
>
> The comments about runtime PM also apply, they applies throughout the
> driver.
>
>> +static int tas2552_set_dai_sysclk(struct snd_soc_dai *dai, int clk_id,
>> + unsigned int freq, int dir)
>> +{
>> + struct snd_soc_codec *codec = dai->codec;
>> +
>> + /* Fill in the PLL control registers for J & D
>> + * PLL_CLK = (.5 * freq * J.D) / 2^p
>> + * Need to fill in J and D here based on incoming freq
>> + */
>> + pm_runtime_get_sync(codec->dev);
>> +
>> + snd_soc_update_bits(codec, TAS2552_CFG_2, TAS2552_PLL_ENABLE, 0);
>> +
>> + snd_soc_write(codec, TAS2552_PLL_CTRL_1, 0x10);
>> + snd_soc_write(codec, TAS2552_PLL_CTRL_2, 0x00);
>> + snd_soc_write(codec, TAS2552_PLL_CTRL_3, 0x00);
>> +
>> + snd_soc_update_bits(codec, TAS2552_CFG_2, TAS2552_PLL_ENABLE,
>> + TAS2552_PLL_ENABLE);
>> +
>> + pm_runtime_put(codec->dev);
> This makes no sense at all - please look at what other drivers are doing
> with set_sysclk(). It should be used to get information about how the
> device is clocked.
>
>> +static int tas2552_startup(struct snd_pcm_substream *substream,
>> + struct snd_soc_dai *dai)
>> +{
>> + struct snd_soc_codec *codec = dai->codec;
>> +
>> + pm_runtime_get_sync(codec->dev);
>> +
>> + /* Turn on Class D amplifier */
>> + snd_soc_update_bits(codec, TAS2552_CFG_2, TAS2552_CLASSD_EN_MASK,
>> + TAS2552_CLASSD_EN);
> This should be done using DAPM.
You mentioned this before. Isn't the startup part of the DAPM calls?
>
>> +static int tas2552_codec_probe(struct snd_soc_codec *codec)
>> +{
>> + struct tas2552_data *tas2552 = snd_soc_codec_get_drvdata(codec);
>> + int ret;
>> +
>> + tas2552_power(tas2552, 1);
>> + tas2552_sw_shutdown(tas2552, 0);
>> +
>> + pm_runtime_set_active(codec->dev);
>> + pm_runtime_set_autosuspend_delay(codec->dev, 1000);
>> + pm_runtime_use_autosuspend(codec->dev);
>> + pm_runtime_enable(codec->dev);
>> + pm_runtime_mark_last_busy(codec->dev);
>> + pm_runtime_put_sync_autosuspend(codec->dev);
> This should all be done at the device level probe.
I went back and forth on this in my head whether this should be in the
device probe of the codec probe. I can move them to device probe.
>
>> + /* 0dB gain */
>> + snd_soc_write(codec, TAS2552_PGA_GAIN, 0x10);
> Use the hardware default, your default might not be sensible for some
> other user.
So would other users just patch their own code?
I can leave it to the default value. This is just what the hardware
was tested with.
>
>> + /**
>> + * Data sheet indicates to write 0x0c to 0x0d during init but no
>> + * additional information is given to what it means.
>> + */
>> + snd_soc_write(codec, TAS2552_LIMIT_LVL_CTRL, 0x0c);
>> + /**
>> + * Data sheet indicates to write 0x20 to 0x0e during init but no
>> + * additional information is given to what it means.
>> + */
>> +
>> + snd_soc_write(codec, TAS2552_LIMIT_RATE_HYS, 0x20);
> Use a regmap patch for these.
OK. I see that can be used for undocumented registers.
>
>> +static int tas2552_suspend(struct snd_soc_codec *codec)
>> +{
>> + struct tas2552_data *tas2552 = snd_soc_codec_get_drvdata(codec);
>> + int ret;
>> +
>> + pm_runtime_put(codec->dev);
> This won't work. Let the frameworks worry about this, or check if the
> device is already runtime suspended and then call your runtime suspend
> operation directly.
OK will fix
>> +static const struct i2c_device_id tas2552_id[] = {
>> + { "tas2552-codec", 0 },
>> + { }
>> +};
>> +MODULE_DEVICE_TABLE(i2c, tas2552_id);
> No -codec, look at what other drivers do.
OK will remove.
--
------------------
Dan Murphy
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