On Thu, May 30, 2019 at 10:45:01AM +0800, Joseph Lo wrote: > On 5/29/19 9:26 PM, Dmitry Osipenko wrote: > > 29.05.2019 11:21, Joseph Lo пишет: > > > This is the initial patch for Tegra210 EMC clock driver, which doesn't > > > include the support code and detail sequence for clock scaling yet. > > > > > > The driver is designed to support LPDDR4 SDRAM. Because of the LPDDR4 > > > devices need to do initial time training before it can be used, the > > > firmware will help to do that at early boot stage. Then, the trained > > > table of the rates we support will pass to the kernel via DT. So the > > > driver can get the trained table for clock scaling support. > > > > > > For the higher rate support (above 800MHz), the periodic training is > > > needed for the timing compensation. So basically, two methodologies for > > > clock scaling are supported, one is following the clock changing > > > sequence to update the EMC table to EMC registers and another is if the > > > rate needs periodic training, then we will start a timer to do that > > > periodically until it scales to the lower rate. > > > > > > Based on the work of Peter De Schrijver <pdeschrijver@xxxxxxxxxx>. > > > > > > Signed-off-by: Joseph Lo <josephl@xxxxxxxxxx> > > > --- > > > v4: > > > - remove the statistic data in debugfs > > > - add tegra210_clk_register_emc API to make it compatible with the case > > > if the kernel still uses the older DTB which doesn't have EMC node. > > > And the MC and EMC clock can still be registered successfully. > > > v3: > > > - address almost all the comments from the previous version > > > - remove the DT parser of EMC table > > > - The EMC table is passing as a binary blob now. > > > --- > > > drivers/memory/tegra/Kconfig | 10 + > > > drivers/memory/tegra/Makefile | 1 + > > > drivers/memory/tegra/tegra210-emc.c | 671 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ > > > drivers/memory/tegra/tegra210-emc.h | 156 +++++++ > > > include/soc/tegra/emc.h | 2 + > > > 5 files changed, 840 insertions(+) > > > create mode 100644 drivers/memory/tegra/tegra210-emc.c > > > create mode 100644 drivers/memory/tegra/tegra210-emc.h > > > > > > diff --git a/drivers/memory/tegra/Kconfig b/drivers/memory/tegra/Kconfig > > > index 4680124ddcab..9d051bcdbee3 100644 > > > --- a/drivers/memory/tegra/Kconfig > > > +++ b/drivers/memory/tegra/Kconfig > > > @@ -26,3 +26,13 @@ config TEGRA124_EMC > > > Tegra124 chips. The EMC controls the external DRAM on the board. > > > This driver is required to change memory timings / clock rate for > > > external memory. > > > + > > > +config TEGRA210_EMC > > > + bool "NVIDIA Tegra210 External Memory Controller driver" > > > + default y > > > > This is not enough since you're leaving possibility to disable > > compilation of the driver, but the compilation will fail because of the > > unresolved symbol (tegra210_clk_register_emc). > > > > > + depends on TEGRA_MC && ARCH_TEGRA_210_SOC > > > + help > > > + This driver is for the External Memory Controller (EMC) found on > > > + Tegra210 chips. The EMC controls the external DRAM on the board. > > > + This driver is required to change memory timings / clock rate for > > > + external memory. > > > > Either TEGRA210_EMC Kconfig option shall be always force-selected for > > T210 or you should move all the clk-related code into drivers/clk/tegra/. > > > > Could you please give a rationale for having EMC clock code within the > > EMC driver? > > I didn't have a specific reason for that initially, just wanted the clock > code and EMC driver together for easier maintenance. > > But considering the fix in v4, that makes it backward compatible with the > case if the kernel uses the older DT without EMC node, I think it's better > to move the clock code into the clk folder now. I looked into this a bit and I don't think this is actually worth it. The problem is that, as opposed to Tegra124 and earlier, the sequence for changing the EMC frequency is much more entangled. The bulk of the programming will be on the EMC side, with the code occasionally calling into CAR code to set the parent clock and some other flags. So there's going to be some interdependencies regardless of where the clock code actually lives. I can try to split this apart, but I don't have very high hopes that the end result will be any cleaner than the version here. Thierry
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