Quoting Jacky Huang (2023-03-28 20:43:23) > On 2023/3/29 上午 11:25, Stephen Boyd wrote: > > Quoting Jacky Huang (2023-03-28 20:13:11) > >> I may not explain clearly enough. The lock/unlock register of system > >> controller is more like > >> a kind of write protection for specific registers, rather than > >> preventing hetero-core CPU access. > >> In many different IP of ma35d1 contain write protected registers. > >> In fact, ma35d1 has a "hardware semaphore" IP, and we have implemented > >> the driver in drivers/hwspinlock. > >> Even the control register of "hardware semaphore" is also write protected. > > What's the need to lock and unlock the registers? Is some other > > processor also writing to the registers that we need to synchronize > > against? Or is Linux the only entity reading and writing the registers? > > I'm wondering if we should simply unlock the registers and never lock > > them. Can you answer this question? > > > >> So, should we implement a system controller driver to provide > >> register_unlock() function? > >> Is it OK to have such a driver in drivers/mfd? > >> Or, just use syscon in device tree for those devices that have write > >> protect registers. > >> > > The hwspinlock framework doesn't require there to be another entity > > accessing some resource. It's there to implement hardware locks. I don't > > see why it can't be used here. > > The current usage of register lock/unlock protect is as the following code: > > static void ma35d1_unlock_regs(struct ma35d1_clk_pll *pll) > { > int ret; > > do { > regmap_write(pll->regmap, REG_SYS_RLKTZNS, 0x59); > regmap_write(pll->regmap, REG_SYS_RLKTZNS, 0x16); > regmap_write(pll->regmap, REG_SYS_RLKTZNS, 0x88); > regmap_read(pll->regmap, REG_SYS_RLKTZNS, &ret); > } while (ret == 0); > } > > static void ma35d1_lock_regs(struct ma35d1_clk_pll *pll) > { > regmap_write(pll->regmap, REG_SYS_RLKTZNS, 0x0); > } > > And the following code is to unlock registers for write and then lock again. > > ma35d1_unlock_regs(pll); > writel_relaxed(reg_ctl[0], pll->ctl0_base); > writel_relaxed(reg_ctl[1], pll->ctl1_base); > writel_relaxed(reg_ctl[2], pll->ctl2_base); > ma35d1_lock_regs(pll); > > The above code is from the clk-ma35d1-pll.c from this patchset. Yeah I understand that you write some registers in the syscon to lock the registers. > > We just employ regmap mechansim for the access to REG_SYS_RLKTZNS register. > Is this implementation OK for you? Thank you. > No. Why can't that be a hwspinlock? Or why can't it be unlocked all the time and rely on software spinlocks in the kernel to prevent concurrent access to the registers accessed by a driver, like a lock for the clk registers and a lock for the reset registers, etc. Or if no two clks or resets exist within one 32-bit word then no lock is necessary.