On Mon, Dec 02, 2019 at 02:02:41PM +0000, Vaittinen, Matti wrote: > On Mon, 2019-12-02 at 13:11 +0000, Mark Brown wrote: > > No, look at the bindings - we support a bunch of different > > suspend states matching the different suspend states that the > > kernel as a whole supports. We don't assume that the device will > > know this but you can always use the current suspend we're going > > for to decide where to update. > Hm. So if I understand this correctly, you mean user should set the > suspend 'target' - and then call the set_suspend_voltage for this > state. To set voltages for all states one should do loop The general idea is that we set the suspend state during the process of suspending rather than in advance - that way when the hardware doesn't understand different types of suspsend things work fine. > get_current_mode() > for_all_modes() { > set_mode() > set_voltage() > } > restore_original_mode() > am I on a right track? I'll try to see if I can find some examples of > this - thanks. I don't understand the save and restore of mode? If setting the suspend configuration affects the runtime state then the hardware doesn't support suspend configuration. > > The framework doesn't care how a device is controlled, that's up > > to the device. Like I said I recommend figuring out what > > voltages are useful to have quick access to at runtime, for > > example it's likely that it's good to have quick access to the > > highest voltage that's been set (and/or the top of the > > constraints). > Problem is that the run-level controlled regulator can't be > individually controlled (unless it is only regulator in the group). I Regulators that have to be controlled en masse aren't really supported by the API, it only understands regulators that are individually controllable. > But just to confirm, I meant for example assigning bucks 1,2,6 and 7 > into a group which 'state' is changed via GPIO line. Say 'states' are > RUN0, RUN1. For each of these bucks we can define a voltage and > enable/disable status which is to be used on RUN0, and another > voltage/state tuple for RUN1. So you could also just create a group consisting of a single regulator? That would be fine for the API.
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