On 02/16/2017 06:00 PM, Chris Brandt wrote:
On Thursday, February 16, 2017, Guenter Roeck wrote:
Hmm, ok. Guess I don't have to understand that you can not use the
watchdog driver because of the above, but implementing exactly the same
functionality in a separate driver is ok.
[ I am sure I am missing something here, so just ignore what I am saying ]
Honestly, I don't have a handle on all the latest 'policies and procedures'
for all the various subsystems. All I know is that I want to figure out how
to execute my 5 lines of code to reset the system when the user types "reboot"
on the command line.
If this WDT had a timeout longer than 125ms, I would make a real watchdog driver
out of it. But at the moment, it just serves as the only way to reset the chip.
Historically, this was the only way to reset a SH4 device...and we just lived
with that fact. When Renesas moved from SH4 to ARM, a lot of the design teams
just kept the same philosophy (and copied the HW blocks they knew already worked)
FWIW, the watchdog subsystem should support that easily, even with 125 ms hardware
timeout. We added that capability for that very purpose. That would only fail if
the system is stuck with interrupts disabled for more than 125 ms, which seems
unlikely. I think the gpio watchdog on some systems has a similar low hardware
timeout.
v2: * changed DT bindings from 'wdt-reset' to 'rza-wdt' * changed
hard coded register values to defines * added msleep to while(1)
loop
Sure you can sleep here ?
As per Geert's review:
On Wednesday, February 15, 2017, Geert Uytterhoeven wrote:
+ + /* Wait for WDT overflow */ + while (1)
+ ;
This burns CPU, and thus power, albeit for a very short time.
Perhaps add an msleep() to the loop body?
Note that you only have 7.7us before the restart occurs, so probably
not much sleeping will be going on.
Let me rephrase my question. Is it guaranteed that you _can_ sleep in this
function, or in other words that it is guaranteed that interrupts are
enabled ?
Hmm, I'm not sure if will actually 'sleep' or not. Regardless, interrupts or not,
in 7.7us, the internal reset circuit is going to get triggered and the whole system
is going to reboot not matter what is going on.
That isn't the point, really. You might get a WARN blob if msleep() is called
with interrupts disabled, but of course you won't really see that because it can
not be displayed in 7.7 us.
I know Geert's suggestion was in reference to saving power...but in reality it's
probably negligible when we are talking about 7.7us. The reboot is going to
automatically shut off all the peripherals clocks as well.
Maybe udelay(10); would have been more acceptable (and appropriate).
Guenter
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