On 25 January 2017 at 17:59, Dave Gerlach <d-gerlach@xxxxxx> wrote: > On 01/24/2017 04:03 AM, Ulf Hansson wrote: >> >> On 23 January 2017 at 21:11, Dave Gerlach <d-gerlach@xxxxxx> wrote: >>> >>> On 01/20/2017 10:52 AM, Ulf Hansson wrote: >>>> >>>> >>>> [...] >>>> >>>>>>> Another option is create something new either common or TI SCI >>>>>>> specific. It could be just a table of ids and phandles in the SCI >>>>>>> node. I'm much more comfortable with an isolated property in one node >>>>>>> than something scattered throughout the DT. >>>>>> >>>>>> >>>>>> >>>>>> To me, this seems like the best possible solution. >>>>>> >>>>>> However, perhaps we should also consider the SCPI Generic power domain >>>>>> (drivers/firmware/scpi_pm_domain.c), because I believe it's closely >>>>>> related. >>>>>> To change the power state of a device, this PM domain calls >>>>>> scpi_device_set|get_power_state() (drivers/firmware/arm_scpi.c), which >>>>>> also needs a device id as a parameter. Very similar to our case with >>>>>> the TI SCI domain. >>>>>> >>>>>> Currently these SCPI device ids lacks corresponding DT bindings, so >>>>>> the scpi_pm_domain tries to work around it by assigning ids >>>>>> dynamically at genpd creation time. >>>>>> >>>>>> That makes me wonder, whether we should think of something >>>>>> common/generic? >>>>> >>>>> >>>>> >>>>> When you say something common/generic, do you mean a better binding for >>>>> genpd, >>>>> or something bigger than that like a new driver? Because I do think a >>>>> phandle >>>>> cell left open for the genpd provider to interpret solves both the scpi >>>>> and >>>>> ti-sci problem we are facing here in the best way. Using generic PM >>>>> domains lets >>>>> us do exactly what we want apart from interpreting the phandle cell >>>>> with >>>>> our >>>>> driver, and I feel like anything else we try at this point is just >>>>> going >>>>> to be >>>>> to work around that. Is bringing back genpd xlate something we can >>>>> discuss? >>>> >>>> >>>> >>>> Bringing back xlate, how would that help? Wouldn't that just mean that >>>> you will get one genpd per device? That's not an option, I think we >>>> are all in agreement to that. >>> >>> >>> >>> Sure, perhaps the custom xlate wouldn't be the right way to do it, as we >>> wouldn't be able to associate a device directly to a phandle, at least >>> with >>> how it was implemented before, but I think we can skip that entirely. >>> Does >>> opening up the interpretation of the cells of the 'power-domains' phandle >>> not solve all of these issues? Is that out of the question? >>> >>> genpd_xlate_simple currently just makes sure the args_count of the >>> 'power-domains' phandle was zero and bails if it was not. Why couldn't we >>> remove this check and let the driver interpret it while still using >>> of_genpd_add_provider_simple to register the provider? It's still a >>> 'simple' >>> provider from the perspective of the genpd framework and the actual pm >>> domain mapping will not change, but now the driver can parse the cells >>> and >>> do whatever it needs to, such as reading a device id. >>> >>> I think that's a bit more flexible and will avoid breaking anything that >>> is >>> there today. >> >> >> Would you mind providing an example? Perhaps also some code snippets >> dealing with the parsing? > > > So again the goal of this is to move the ti,sci-id value back to > power-domains phandle instead of having a separate property, so that would > be step one in the DT. Then in the power-domains node change > #power-domain-cells to one. And then from there, the only change to the > genpd framework is this: > > diff --git a/drivers/base/power/domain.c b/drivers/base/power/domain.c > index a5e1262b964b..b82e61f0bcfa 100644 > --- a/drivers/base/power/domain.c > +++ b/drivers/base/power/domain.c > @@ -1603,8 +1603,6 @@ static struct generic_pm_domain genpd_xlate_simple > struct of_phandle_args *genpdspec, > void *data) > { > - if (genpdspec->args_count != 0) > - return ERR_PTR(-EINVAL); > return data; > } > > > because genpd_xlate_simple only checks that the phandle is zero so that it > can fail if it is not, but there's no functional reason it needs to do this. > The genpd framework works as it did before no matter what the cells are set > to if using of_genpd_add_provider_simple. Then in the attach_dev callback > inside the ti_sci_pm_domains driver instead of doing > > ret = of_property_read_u32(np, "ti,sci-id", &idx); > > to read the ti,sc-id for a device into idx we can now do: > > ret = of_parse_phandle_with_args(np, "power-domains", > "#power-domain-cells", 0, &pd_args); > idx = pd_args.args[0]; > > or even simpler from within our driver > > ret = of_property_read_u32_index(np, "power-domains", 1, &idx); > > To read the value into idx. > > This requires minimal changes to the genpd framework and gives the option > for the driver to interpret the cell manually when using a simple provider. > The genpd framework still uses the phandle just to get the power-domain > device and the cells are left entirely up to the driver to interpret, but if > desired you could still use the genpd onecell driver for a specific use of > the phandle cell, or use it with zero cells. > > I can send out an updated series if there are no major objections, or just > to start discussion there. Ok, this seems to work! I am ready to review! :-) Of course, don't forget to update the existing DT doc for the power domain bindings. Kind regards Uffe -- 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