On 11/7/18 12:29 PM, Florian Fainelli wrote:
On 11/7/18 8:27 AM, Alan Stern wrote:
On Wed, 7 Nov 2018, Al Cooper wrote:
On 11/7/18 10:23 AM, Alan Stern wrote:
On Tue, 6 Nov 2018, Florian Fainelli wrote:
On 11/6/18 1:40 PM, Al Cooper wrote:
On 11/6/18 11:08 AM, Alan Stern wrote:
On Mon, 5 Nov 2018, Al Cooper wrote:
Add support for Broadcom STB SoC's to the ohci platform driver.
Signed-off-by: Al Cooper <alcooperx@xxxxxxxxx>
---
@@ -177,6 +189,8 @@ static int ohci_platform_probe(struct
platform_device *dev)
ohci->flags |= OHCI_QUIRK_FRAME_NO;
if (pdata->num_ports)
ohci->num_ports = pdata->num_ports;
+ if (pdata->suspend_without_phy_exit)
+ hcd->suspend_without_phy_exit = 1;
Sorry if I missed this in the earlier discussions... Is there any
possibility of adding a DT binding that could express this requirement,
instead of putting it in the platform data?
Alan Stern
Alan,
That was my original approach but internal review suggested that I use
pdata instead. Below is my original patch for:
And the reason for that suggestion was really because it was percevied
as encoding a driver behavior as a Device Tree property as opposed to
describing something that was inherently and strictly a hardware
behavior (therefore suitable for Device Tree).
Right. The best way to approach this problem is to identify and
characterize the hardware behavior which makes this override necessary.
Then _that_ can be added to DT, since it will be a property of the
hardware rather than of the driver.
Add the ability to skip calling the PHY's exit routine on suspend
and the PHY's init routine on resume. This is to handle a USB PHY
that should have it's power_off function called on suspend but cannot
have it's exit function called because on exit it will disable the
PHY to the point where register accesses to the Host Controllers
using the PHY will be disabled and the host drivers will crash.
What's special about this PHY? Why does the exit function mess the PHY
up? Or to put it another way, why doesn't the exit function mess up
other PHYs in the same way?
For that matter, can we change the code so that suspend doesn't call
the exit function for _any_ PHY? Will just calling the power_off
function be good enough? If not, then why not?
Alan Stern
In our USB hardware the USB PHY supplies a clock for the EHCI/OHCI and
XHCI host controllers and if the PHY is totally shut down the EHCI, OHCI
and XHCI registers will cause an exception if accessed and cause the
EHCI, OHCI and XHCI drivers to crash. There is always talk of fixing
this in the hardware by adding an aux clock that will takeover when the
PHY clock is shut down, but this hasn't happened yet. It seems like
"exit on suspend" still makes sense on systems that don't have this
problem (additional power savings?) so removing the exit on suspend for
all systems is not a good idea.
Then in theory you should be able to add a Device Tree property which
says that the PHY provides a clock for the USB host controller. That
is strictly a property of the hardware; it has nothing to do with the
driver. Therefore it is appropriate for DT.
The very compatible string that is being allocated/defined for this
controller carries that information already, that is, if you probe a
"brcm,bcm7445-ohci" compatible then that means the controller has a
dependency on the PHY to supply its clock.
Adding a property vs. keying on the compatible string makes sense if you
know there is at least a second consumer of that property (unless we
make it a broadcom specific property, in which case, it really is
redundant with the compatible string).
Anyway, my grudge with that property was the name chosen initially,
which included an action to be performed by an implementation as opposed
to something purely descriptive. E.g: 'phy-supplies-clock' might be okay.
Wouldn't this solve your issue?
It would not change much except that there is no need to much with
ohci-platform.c anymore, but ultimately that property needs to be read
by ohci-hcd.c and acted on, which would likely lead to the same amount
of changes as those present in patch #2 currently.
We also need this functionality in the EHCI and XHCI drivers and it's
not the ohci-hcd.c module that needs to know, it's the core/phy.c module
called from core/hcd.c.
Al