pon., 15 kwi 2019 o 12:21 Sekhar Nori <nsekhar@xxxxxx> napisał(a): > > On 12/04/19 9:01 PM, Bartosz Golaszewski wrote: > > pt., 12 kwi 2019 o 15:53 Sekhar Nori <nsekhar@xxxxxx> napisał(a): > >> > >> On 12/04/19 5:41 PM, Bartosz Golaszewski wrote: > >>> pt., 12 kwi 2019 o 13:26 Sekhar Nori <nsekhar@xxxxxx> napisał(a): > >>>> > >>>> Hi Bartosz, > >>>> > >>>> On 08/04/19 1:29 PM, Bartosz Golaszewski wrote: > >>>>> From: David Lechner <david@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx> > >>>>> > >>>>> This adds a cpu node and operating points to the common da850.dtsi file. > >>>>> > >>>>> Additionally, a regulator is added to the LEGO EV3 board along with > >>>>> some board-specific CPU configuration. > >>>>> > >>>>> Regulators need to be hooked up on other boards to get them working. > >>>>> > >>>>> Signed-off-by: David Lechner <david@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx> > >>>>> Signed-off-by: Bartosz Golaszewski <bgolaszewski@xxxxxxxxxxxx> > >>>> > >>>> I remember you mentioning about some problems using OCHI and cpufreq > >>>> together. Are those resolved now? CPU PLL on DA850 can affect other > >>>> peripheral clock frequencies too. So enabling it should really be a > >>>> per-board decision. > >>>> > >>> > >>> The problems are still there. I've never been able to find the > >>> culprit, but it also occurs on TI BSP in the same way (a couple > >>> cpufreq transitions will make the controller unresponsive). > >> > >> Is that on LCDK as well? As I recall cpufreq was never enabled on LCDK > >> in TI BSP. > >> > > > > Yes, I just verified that the bug occurs on LCDK with patches from this series. > > > >> If the OHCI problem is present on LCDK, then there is a user visible > >> regression on mainline after this patch. Lets enable cpufreq in LCDK > >> only if all working peripherals keep working afterwards. > >> > > > > The OHCI driver doesn't register any cpufreq transition notifier > > callbacks. I can't really find anything in the datasheet, but I'm > > wondering if we shouldn't do something similar to what the driver for > > davinci i2c controller does. I'll try a couple things tomorrow. > > Even if OHCI issue is fixed, with a fixed regulator like on LCDK, I am > not sure the benefits of just frequency scaling will be justifiable enough. > > Fixing the OHCI issue may help in other boards like da850-evm use it > though. So that will be a good thing. > I've been trying different things, like suspending the device before the transition, resetting the controller or playing with the clock during transitions but it always results in the same kind of error: ohci-da8xx 1e25000.usb: frame counter not updating; disabled ohci-da8xx 1e25000.usb: HC died; cleaning up usb 1-1: USB disconnect, device number 2 If you have any idea - let me know, otherwise I'll give up. If we agree on the direction of these patches, then I can go with a single enabled OPP for lcdk (456 MHz) and all OPPs up to 375 MHz enabled for da850-evm. David - do you want to keep the lego board as is? Bart > How do you feel about keeping all OPPs disabled by default in da850.dtsi > and enabling only the ones that make sense for a board in <board>.dts? > > Empty OPP table is illegal, so this does mean that every board must > enable at least one OPP. > > Thanks, > Sekhar