Re: [PATCH/RFC 3/4] of/clk: Register clocks suitable for Runtime PM with the PM core

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On 30/04/14 14:25, Laurent Pinchart wrote:
On Tuesday 29 April 2014 14:16:10 Grant Likely wrote:
On Fri, 25 Apr 2014 16:44:58 -0700, Kevin Hilman <khilman@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
Geert Uytterhoeven <geert+renesas@xxxxxxxxx> writes:
When adding a device from DT, check if its clocks are suitable for
Runtime PM, and register them with the PM core.
If Runtime PM is disabled, just enable the clock.

This allows the PM core to automatically manage gate clocks of devices
for Runtime PM.

...unless the device is already in an existing pm_domain, right?

I like this approach, and it extends nicely what we already do on
platforms using drivers/base/power/clock_ops.c into DT land.

My only concern is how this will interact if it's used along with
devices that have existing pm_domains.  I don't have any specific
concerns (yet, because it's Friday, and my brain is turing off), but it
just made me wonder if this will be potentially confusing.

I have big concerns about this approach. First, it will only work if
a clock is available at deivce creation time. The conversion of irq
controllers to normal device drivers has already shown that is a bad
idea.

I also don't like that it tries to set up every clock, but there is no
guarantee that the driver will even use it. I would rather see this
behaviour linked into the function that obtains the clock at driver
.probe() time. That way it can handle deferred probe correctly and it
only sets up clocks that are actually used by the driver.

I like the idea, as it gives an opt-in approach to the problem: drivers could
decide whether they want the runtime PM core to handle clocks automatically
(which should cover most cases), but would have the option of handling clocks
manually if needed for special purposes.

If drivers could have a field to say that they allow the driver-core
or the pm-runtime would mean that drivers could easily be change without
having to deal with what the SoC/SoC family have to care about this.

It would also mean that we could change drivers without having to make
any changes to the SoC to say that it has to opt-in to the support.


--
Ben Dooks				http://www.codethink.co.uk/
Senior Engineer				Codethink - Providing Genius
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