By default if bus clock has no users its "enable count" value is 0. It might be actually running if it's already enabled in bootloader, but then in some cases it can be disabled by mistake. For example, such case was observed when dw_mci_probe() enabled bus clock, then failed to do something and disabled that bus clock on error path. After that even attempt to read the 'clk_summary' file in DebugFS freezed forever, as CMU bus clock ended up being disabled and it wasn't possible to access CMU registers anymore. To avoid such cases, CMU driver must increment the ref count for that bus clock by running clk_prepare_enable(). There is already existing '.clk_name' field in struct samsung_cmu_info, exactly for that reason. It was added in commit 523d3de41f02 ("clk: samsung: exynos5433: Add support for runtime PM"). But the clock is actually enabled only in Exynos5433 clock driver. Let's mimic what is done there in generic samsung_cmu_register_one() function, so other drivers can benefit from that `.clk_name' field. As was described above, it might be helpful not only for PM reasons, but also to prevent possible erroneous clock gating on error paths. Another way to workaround that issue would be to use CLOCK_IS_CRITICAL flag for corresponding gate clocks. But that might be not very good design decision, as we might still want to disable that bus clock, e.g. on PM suspend. Signed-off-by: Sam Protsenko <semen.protsenko@xxxxxxxxxx> --- drivers/clk/samsung/clk.c | 13 +++++++++++++ 1 file changed, 13 insertions(+) diff --git a/drivers/clk/samsung/clk.c b/drivers/clk/samsung/clk.c index 1949ae7851b2..da65149fa502 100644 --- a/drivers/clk/samsung/clk.c +++ b/drivers/clk/samsung/clk.c @@ -357,6 +357,19 @@ struct samsung_clk_provider * __init samsung_cmu_register_one( ctx = samsung_clk_init(np, reg_base, cmu->nr_clk_ids); + /* Keep bus clock running, so it's possible to access CMU registers */ + if (cmu->clk_name) { + struct clk *bus_clk; + + bus_clk = __clk_lookup(cmu->clk_name); + if (bus_clk) { + clk_prepare_enable(bus_clk); + } else { + pr_err("%s: could not find bus clock %s\n", __func__, + cmu->clk_name); + } + } + if (cmu->pll_clks) samsung_clk_register_pll(ctx, cmu->pll_clks, cmu->nr_pll_clks, reg_base); -- 2.30.2