On Wed, May 29, 2019 at 11:13:15AM +0200, Linus Walleij wrote: > On Mon, May 20, 2019 at 4:21 PM Stephen Boyd <sboyd@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > > > + vibrator@fd8c3450 { > > > + compatible = "qcom,msm8974-vibrator"; > > > + reg = <0xfd8c3450 0x400>; > > > > This is inside the multimedia clk controller. The resource reservation > > mechanism should be complaining loudly here. Is the driver writing > > directly into clk controller registers to adjust a duty cycle of the > > camera's general purpose clk? > > > > Can you add support for duty cycle to the qcom clk driver's RCGs and > > then write a generic clk duty cycle vibrator driver that adjusts the > > duty cycle of the clk? That would be better than reaching into the clk > > controller registers to do this. > > There is something ontological about this. > > A clock with variable duty cycle, isn't that by definition a PWM? > I don't suppose it is normal for qcom clocks to be able to control > their duty cycle, but rather default to 50/50 as we could expect? > > I would rather say that maybe the qcom drivers/clk/qcom/* file > should be exporting a PWM from the linux side of things > rather than a clock for this thingie, and adding #pwm-cells > in the DT node for the clock controller, making it possible > to obtain PWMs right out of it, if it is a single device node for > the whole thing. > > Analogous to how we have GPIOs that are ortogonally interrupt > providers I don't see any big problem in a clock controller > being clock and PWM provider at the same time. > > There is code in drivers/clk/clk-pwm to use a pwm as a clock > but that is kind of the reverse use case, if we implement PWMs > directly in a clock controller driver then these can be turned into > clocks using clk-pwm.c should it be needed, right? > > Part of me start to question whether clk and pwm should even > be separate subsystems :/ they seem to solve an overlapping > problem space. My first revision of this vibrator driver used the Linux PWM framework due to the variable duty cycle: https://lore.kernel.org/lkml/20180926235112.25710-1-masneyb@xxxxxxxxxxxxx/ I used the pwm-vibra driver on the input side. Brian