Hello Krzysztof, Thanks a lot for your feedback. On 10/09/2014 10:45 AM, Krzysztof Kozlowski wrote: > On śro, 2014-10-08 at 15:44 +0200, Javier Martinez Canillas wrote: >> --- a/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/regulator/regulator.txt >> +++ b/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/regulator/regulator.txt >> @@ -23,6 +23,14 @@ Optional properties: >> state among following defined suspend states: >> <3>: PM_SUSPEND_MEM - Setup regulator according to regulator-state-mem >> <4>: PM_SUSPEND_MAX - Setup regulator according to regulator-state-disk >> +- regulator-initial-mode: initial regulator operating mode. One of following: >> + <1>: REGULATOR_MODE_FAST - Regulator can handle fast changes. >> + <2>: REGULATOR_MODE_NORMAL - Normal regulator power supply mode. >> + <4>: REGULATOR_MODE_IDLE - Regulator runs in a more efficient mode. >> + <8>: REGULATOR_MODE_STANDBY - Regulator runs in the most efficient mode. >> + modes are defined in the dt-bindings/regulator/regulator.h header and can be >> + used in device tree sources files. If no mode is defined, then the OS will not >> + manage the operating mode and the HW default values will be used instead. >> - regulator-state-mem sub-root node for Suspend-to-RAM mode >> : suspend to memory, the device goes to sleep, but all data stored in memory, >> only some external interrupt can wake the device. > > I agree with the need and the idea of generic bindings for operating > modes for regulators. At least for Exynos-based boards the PMICs have > quite similar opmodes. > > However the regulator mode from consumer.h (and in above doc) does not > match well with these opmodes. Example is yours patch 4/5: > - idle ("more efficient mode") maps to "low power mode in suspend", > - standby ("the most efficient mode") maps to "OFF in suspend". > > Actually we are not enable "efficient modes" but we configure how the > regulator will behave when AP says - I'm suspending. > Agree, Mark also pointed out that there is a difference between changing how the regulator will behave on runtime vs changing how the regulator will behave during system suspend. AFAIU from his explanation, the modes defined in consumer.h only applies to the former and conceptually there should be a difference between those two cases even when the Maxim PMIC seems to mix it both in the data-sheet and by using the same field. I answered Mark on patch #5 with a suggestion on how to handle this in a generic way to avoid each driver having their own custom DT binding and duplicating the parsing code. Could you please answer there with your thoughts? > > Another issue: is "initial_state" not doing all this already? > One of the options I indeed evaluated was if using initial_state could be possible. But currently the .set_suspend_mode function handler is only called for the STANDBY, MEM and MAX suspend modes. While is true that this could be extended to also support PM_SUSPEND_ON, I don't think that it makes sense conceptually. Since is not the same to set a mode to be used at runtime than setting a mode to be used during suspend. AFAIU that is the reason why there are separate .set_suspend_mode and .set_mode operations and that's why there are both an .initial_state and an .initial_mode. > Best regards, > Krzysztof > Best regards, Javier -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe devicetree" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html