Caesar, On Wed, Jun 29, 2016 at 6:56 PM, Caesar Wang <wxt@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > From: Elaine Zhang <zhangqing@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx> > > In order to meet low power requirements, a power management unit (PMU) is > designed for controlling power resources in RK3399. The RK3399 PMU is > dedicated for managing the power of the whole chip. > > 1. add pd node for RK3399 Soc > 2. create power domain tree > 3. add qos node for domain > > From the DT/binds and driver can get more detail information: > The driver: > drivers/soc/rockchip/pm_domains.c > The document: > Documentation/devicetree/bindings/soc/rockchip/power_domain.txt > > --- > > Tested on vop and gpu devices added for next kernel. > PD: > localhost / # cat sys/kernel/debug/pm_genpd/pm_genpd_summary Nit: can you put a "/" before "sys" here and elsewhere in your patches? > domain status slaves > /device runtime status > ---------------------------------------------------------------------- > pd_gpu on > /devices/platform/ff9a0000.gpu active > pd_vopl off > /devices/platform/ff8f0000.vop suspended > pd_vopb off > /devices/platform/ff900000.vop suspended > pd_vo off pd_vopb, pd_vopl > pd_hdcp off > ... > pd_iep off > pd_vcodec off > pd_vdu off > > QOS: > localhost / # cat sys/kernel/debug/pm_qos/ > cpu_dma_latency network_latency > memory_bandwidth network_throughput What is this supposed to be showing exactly? You can't "cat" a directory, so maybe you meant "ls"? Also, each of these files contains the string "Empty!" and these files seem fairly unconnected to your patch. Those files exist both before and after your patch and nothing that I can see in the Rockchip QoS stuff hooks up to the generic Linux QoS infrastructure. The power domains just save and restore the QoS--they don't actually allow settting it. > Signed-off-by: Elaine Zhang <zhangqing@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx> > Signed-off-by: Caesar Wang <wxt@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx> > --- > arch/arm64/boot/dts/rockchip/rk3399.dtsi | 153 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ > 1 file changed, 153 insertions(+) > > diff --git a/arch/arm64/boot/dts/rockchip/rk3399.dtsi b/arch/arm64/boot/dts/rockchip/rk3399.dtsi > index a6dd623..cc4035e 100644 > --- a/arch/arm64/boot/dts/rockchip/rk3399.dtsi > +++ b/arch/arm64/boot/dts/rockchip/rk3399.dtsi > @@ -45,6 +45,7 @@ > #include <dt-bindings/interrupt-controller/arm-gic.h> > #include <dt-bindings/interrupt-controller/irq.h> > #include <dt-bindings/pinctrl/rockchip.h> > +#include <dt-bindings/power/rk3399-power.h> > #include <dt-bindings/thermal/thermal.h> > > / { > @@ -594,6 +595,158 @@ > status = "disabled"; > }; > > + qos_gpu: qos_gpu@ffae0000 { > + compatible = "syscon"; > + reg = <0x0 0xffae0000 0x0 0x20>; > + }; > + qos_video_m0: qos_video_m0@ffab8000 { > + compatible = "syscon"; > + reg = <0x0 0xffab8000 0x0 0x20>; > + }; > + qos_video_m1_r: qos_video_m1_r@ffac0000 { > + compatible = "syscon"; > + reg = <0x0 0xffac0000 0x0 0x20>; > + }; > + qos_video_m1_w: qos_video_m1_w@ffac0080 { > + compatible = "syscon"; > + reg = <0x0 0xffac0080 0x0 0x20>; > + }; > + qos_rga_r: qos_rga_r@ffab0000 { > + compatible = "syscon"; > + reg = <0x0 0xffab0000 0x0 0x20>; > + }; > + qos_rga_w: qos_rga_w@ffab0080 { > + compatible = "syscon"; > + reg = <0x0 0xffab0080 0x0 0x20>; > + }; > + qos_iep: qos_iep@ffa98000 { > + compatible = "syscon"; > + reg = <0x0 0xffa98000 0x0 0x20>; > + }; > + qos_vop_big_r: qos_vop_big_r@ffac8000 { > + compatible = "syscon"; > + reg = <0x0 0xffac8000 0x0 0x20>; > + }; > + qos_vop_big_w: qos_vop_big_w@ffac8080 { > + compatible = "syscon"; > + reg = <0x0 0xffac8080 0x0 0x20>; > + }; > + qos_vop_little: qos_vop_little@ffad0000 { > + compatible = "syscon"; > + reg = <0x0 0xffad0000 0x0 0x20>; > + }; > + qos_isp0_m0: qos_isp0_m0@ffaa0000 { > + compatible = "syscon"; > + reg = <0x0 0xffaa0000 0x0 0x20>; > + }; > + qos_isp0_m1: qos_isp0_m1@ffaa0080 { > + compatible = "syscon"; > + reg = <0x0 0xffaa0080 0x0 0x20>; > + }; > + qos_isp1_m0: qos_isp1_m0@ffaa8000 { > + compatible = "syscon"; > + reg = <0x0 0xffaa8000 0x0 0x20>; > + }; > + qos_isp1_m1: qos_isp1_m1@ffaa8080 { > + compatible = "syscon"; > + reg = <0x0 0xffaa8080 0x0 0x20>; > + }; > + qos_hdcp: qos_hdcp@ffa90000 { > + compatible = "syscon"; > + reg = <0x0 0xffa90000 0x0 0x20>; > + }; A bit of a nit that your sorting is a bit random here. I know that your sorting order seems to match the TRM, but really we should just sort by base address. Speaking of the TRM, it seems like some entries are missing. QOS for everything above the GPU (like usb host1, for instance) is missing. Similarly the 3 entries in the TRM listed after hdcp. Should we put them all in so that we have them later if/when we need them? > + pmu: power-management@ff310000 { > + compatible = "rockchip,rk3399-pmu", "syscon", "simple-mfd"; > + reg = <0x0 0xff310000 0x0 0x1000>; > + > + power: power-controller { > + status = "okay"; > + compatible = "rockchip,rk3399-power-controller"; > + #power-domain-cells = <1>; > + #address-cells = <1>; > + #size-cells = <0>; > + > + pd_vdu { > + reg = <RK3399_PD_VDU>; > + clocks = <&cru ACLK_VDU>, > + <&cru HCLK_VDU>; > + pm_qos = <&qos_video_m1_r>, > + <&qos_video_m1_w>; > + }; > + pd_vcodec { > + reg = <RK3399_PD_VCODEC>; > + clocks = <&cru ACLK_VCODEC>, > + <&cru HCLK_VCODEC>; > + pm_qos = <&qos_video_m0>; > + }; > + pd_iep { > + reg = <RK3399_PD_IEP>; > + clocks = <&cru ACLK_IEP>, > + <&cru HCLK_IEP>; > + pm_qos = <&qos_iep>; > + }; > + pd_rga { > + reg = <RK3399_PD_RGA>; > + clocks = <&cru ACLK_RGA>, > + <&cru HCLK_RGA>; > + pm_qos = <&qos_rga_r>, > + <&qos_rga_w>; > + }; > + pd_vio { > + reg = <RK3399_PD_VIO>; > + #address-cells = <1>; > + #size-cells = <0>; > + > + pd_isp0 { > + reg = <RK3399_PD_ISP0>; > + clocks = <&cru ACLK_ISP0>, > + <&cru HCLK_ISP0>; > + pm_qos = <&qos_isp0_m0>, > + <&qos_isp0_m1>; > + }; > + pd_isp1 { > + reg = <RK3399_PD_ISP1>; > + clocks = <&cru ACLK_ISP1>, > + <&cru HCLK_ISP1>; > + pm_qos = <&qos_isp1_m0>, > + <&qos_isp1_m1>; > + }; > + pd_hdcp { > + reg = <RK3399_PD_HDCP>; > + clocks = <&cru ACLK_HDCP>, > + <&cru HCLK_HDCP>, > + <&cru PCLK_HDCP>; > + pm_qos = <&qos_hdcp>; > + }; > + pd_vo { > + reg = <RK3399_PD_VO>; > + #address-cells = <1>; > + #size-cells = <0>; > + > + pd_vopb { > + reg = <RK3399_PD_VOPB>; > + clocks = <&cru ACLK_VOP0>, > + <&cru HCLK_VOP0>; > + pm_qos = <&qos_vop_big_r>, > + <&qos_vop_big_w>; > + }; > + pd_vopl { > + reg = <RK3399_PD_VOPL>; > + clocks = <&cru ACLK_VOP1>, > + <&cru HCLK_VOP1>; > + pm_qos = <&qos_vop_little>; > + }; > + }; > + }; > + pd_gpu { > + reg = <RK3399_PD_GPU>; > + clocks = <&cru ACLK_GPU>; > + pm_qos = <&qos_gpu>; > + }; Again a nitty sort order question. Is there a reason not to make things alphabetical? AKA: pd_gpu, pd_iep, pd_rga, ... ...and inside pd_vio should be alphabetical too? In the TRM it looks like some of the power domains are grouped together (like all the domains under LOGIC or CENTERLOGIC). If keeping that grouping makes sense here then you should add a comment at the start of each group and sort the groups sanely (and sort within each group). It looks like there are also more power domains that you haven't listed here (like PD_GMAC, for instance, or PD_CORE_L). Are you planning to add those in a followon patch? -Doug -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe devicetree" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html