Hi, On Fri, May 04, 2018 at 02:04:15PM +0200, H. Nikolaus Schaller wrote: > > Am 04.05.2018 um 13:42 schrieb Sebastian Reichel <sre@xxxxxxxxxx>: > >> I think it does not need much more (if at all) than a gpio controller on > >> the OMAP3 chip (I think the clocks are active anyways for use by the other > >> UARTs). > >> > >> We had proposed years ago to reprogram the UART RX pin by pinmux-states > >> into an interrupt gpio but that was rejected because it was not general > >> enough and ugly in the device tree (an rx-gpios record where the rx-line > >> is already connected to the UART-rx). > >> > >> Then we did experiment with tapping the UART driver and finally the > >> serdev API was developed to solve this problem. Hence we use it now this > >> way. > > > > Having any UART active on OMAP results in the SoC not entering > > idle/off wasting energy. For normal (i.e. not connected to a peripheral) > > TTYs you can enable runtime autosuspend and configure the RX pin as > > wakeup interrupt. This will wakeup the TTY on incoming traffic, but you > > will lose the first few characters (since the serial device needs some > > time to wakeup). This is for example supported by the N900 uart3 > > (debug uart): > > > > $ grep -A4 "&uart3 {" arch/arm/boot/dts/omap3-n900.dts > > &uart3 { > > interrupts-extended = <&intc 74 &omap3_pmx_core OMAP3_UART3_RX>; > > pinctrl-names = "default"; > > pinctrl-0 = <&uart3_pins>; > > }; > > > > To get it working, you also need to enable autosuspend for the tty > > in userspace (echo 3000 /sys/class/tty/ttyS2/device/power/autosuspend_delay_ms). > > This is not enabled by default due to the character loss characteristic > > during wakeup. > > > > Having said all of this, serdev does not yet support runtime PM (at > > all). Tony is currently looking into it. Fortunately serdev allows > > us to enable runtime PM by default (once implemented), since we know > > the remote side and can (hopefully) avoid losing characters (i.e. > > with sideband wakeup gpios). > > thanks for explaining this! We originally had similar thoughts when > proposing a w2sg0004 driver for the first time (years ago), but we can > not accept loosing characters... > > Now, I could imagine a potential solution. The key situation why we keep > the serdev open and listening is if the driver did try to turn the module > off, but in fact did turn it on (because it was not in sync). > > It should be possible to cover this by a timer that is started > in this case. If there is serdev data received after assuming the module > is turned off, the driver has detected the wrong case - and can safely > close the serdev until we want to have it powered on again. > > If there is no response after turing off, the module power state is already > in sync and we can close the serdev as well - after the timeout (let's say > 30 seconds). Then, the serdev UART can idle. We should open the serdev > and start this timer also in the probe function to catch an initially wrong > state. That sounds like a good plan. > But I think we should focus on the basics of this driver first. Then it can > be optimized later on. Definitely. -- Sebastian.
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