On Sat, 17 Feb 2024 at 02:03, Bartosz Golaszewski <brgl@xxxxxxxx> wrote: > > From: Bartosz Golaszewski <bartosz.golaszewski@xxxxxxxxxx> > > First, I'd like to apologize for the somewhat chaotic previous iterations > of this series and improper versioning which was rightfully pointed out > to me. I figured that the scope changed so much that it didn't make sense > to consider previous submissions part of the same series as the original > RFC but others thought otherwise so this one becomes v5 and I'll keep the > versioning going forward. > > This is the summary of the work so far: > > v1: Original RFC: > > https://lore.kernel.org/lkml/20240104130123.37115-1-brgl@xxxxxxxx/T/ > > v2: First real patch series (should have been PATCH v2) adding what I > referred to back then as PCI power sequencing: > > https://lore.kernel.org/linux-arm-kernel/2024021413-grumbling-unlivable-c145@gregkh/T/ > > v3: RFC for the DT representation of the PMU supplying the WLAN and BT > modules inside the QCA6391 package (was largely separate from the > series but probably should have been called PATCH or RFC v3): > > https://lore.kernel.org/all/CAMRc=Mc+GNoi57eTQg71DXkQKjdaoAmCpB=h2ndEpGnmdhVV-Q@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx/T/ > > v4: Second attempt at the full series with changed scope (introduction of > the pwrseq subsystem, should have been RFC v4) > > https://lore.kernel.org/lkml/20240201155532.49707-1-brgl@xxxxxxxx/T/ > > === > > With that out of the way, I'd like to get down to explaining the two > problems I'm trying to solve. > > Problem statement #1: Dynamic bus chicken-and-egg problem. > > Certain on-board PCI devices need to be powered up before they are can be > detected but their PCI drivers won't get bound until the device is > powered-up so enabling the relevant resources in the PCI device driver > itself is impossible. > > Problem statement #2: Sharing inter-dependent resources between devices. > > Certain devices that use separate drivers (often on different busses) > share resources (regulators, clocks, etc.). Typically these resources > are reference-counted but in some cases there are additional interactions > between them to consider, for example specific power-up sequence timings. > > === > > The reason for tackling both of these problems in a single series is the > fact the the platform I'm working on - Qualcomm RB5 - deals with both and > both need to be addressed in order to enable WLAN and Bluetooth support > upstream. > > The on-board WLAN/BT package - QCA6391 - has a Power Management Unit that > takes inputs from the host and exposes LDO outputs consumed by the BT and > WLAN modules which can be powered-up and down independently. However > a delay of 100ms must be respected between enabling the BT- and > WLAN-enable GPIOs[*]. > > === > > This series is logically split into several sections. I'll go > patch-by-patch and explain each step. > > Patch 1/18: > > This is a commit taken from the list by Jonathan Cameron that adds > a __free() helper for OF nodes. Not strictly related to the series but > until said commit ends in next, I need to carry it with this series. > > Patch 2/18: > > This enables the ath12k PCI module in arm64 defconfig as Qualcomm sm8650 > and sm8550 reference platforms use it in the WCN7850 module. > > Patches 3/18-6/18: > > These contain all relevant DT bindings changes. We add new documents for > the QCA6390 PMU and ATH12K devices as well as extend the bindings for the > Qualcomm Bluetooth and ATH11K modules with regulators used by them in > QCA6390. > > Patches 7/18-9/18: > > These contain changes to device-tree sources for the three platforms we > work with in this series. As the WCN7850 module doesn't require any > specific timings introducing dependencies between the Bluetooth and WLAN > modules, while the QCA6390 does, we take two different approaches to how > me model them in DT. > > For WCN7850 we hide the existence of the PMU as modeling it is simply not > necessary. The BT and WLAN devices on the device-tree are represented as > consuming the inputs (relevant to the functionality of each) of the PMU > directly. > > For QCA6390 on RB5 we add the PMU node as a platform device. It consumes > regulators and GPIOs from the host and exposed regulators consumer in turn > by the BT and WLAN modules. This represents the internal structure of the > package. > > Patches 10/18-14/18: > > These contain the bulk of the PCI changes for this series. We introduce > a simple framework for powering up PCI devices before detecting them on > the bus and the first user of this library in the form of the WCN7850 PCI > power control driver. > > The general approach is as follows: PCI devices that need special > treatment before they can be powered up, scanned and bound to their PCI > drivers must be described on the device-tree as child nodes of the PCI > port node. These devices will be instantiated on the platform bus. They > will in fact be generic platform devices with the compatible of the form > used for PCI devices already upstream ("pci<vendor ID>,<device ID">). We > add a new directory under drivers/pci/pwrctl/ that contains PCI pwrctl > drivers. These drivers are platform drivers that will now be matched > against the devices instantiated from port children just like any other > platform pairs. > > Both the power control platform device *AND* the associated PCI device > reuse the same OF node and have access to the same properties. The goal > of the platform driver is to request and bring up any required resources > and let the pwrctl framework know that it's now OK to rescan the bus and > detect the devices. When the device is bound, we are notified about it > by the PCI bus notifier event and can establish a device link between the > power control device and the PCI device so that any future extension for > power-management will already be able to work with the correct hierachy. > > The reusing of the OF node is the reason for the small changes to the PCI > OF core: as the bootloader can possibly leave the relevant regulators on > before booting linux, the PCI device can be detected before its platform > abstraction is probed. In this case, we find that device first and mark > its OF node as reused. The pwrctl framework handles the opposite case > (when the PCI device is detected only after the platform driver > successfully enabled it). > > Patches 15/18-16/18: > > These add a relatively simple power sequencing subsystem and the first > driver using it: the pwrseq module for the QCA6390 PMU. > > For the record: Bjorn suggested a different solution: a regulator driver > that would - based on which regulators are enabled by a consumer - enable > relevant resources (drive the enable GPIOs) while respecting the > HW-specific delays. This would however require significant and yet > unprecised changed to the regulator subsystem as well as be an abuse of > the regulator provider API akin to using the reset framework for power > sequencing as proposed before. > > Instead I'm proposing to add a subsystem that allows different devices to > use a shared power sequence split into consumer-specific as well as > common "units". > > A power sequence provider driver registers a set of units with pwrseq > core. Each unit can be enabled and disabled and contains an optional list > of other units which must be enabled before it itself can be. A unit > represents a discreet chunk of the power sequence. > > It also registers a list of targets: a target is an abstraction wrapping > a unit which allows consumers to tell pwrseq which unit they want to > reach. Real-life example is the driver we're adding here: there's a set > of common regulators, two PCIe-specific ones and two enable GPIOs: one > for Bluetooth and one for WLAN. > > The Bluetooth driver requests a descriptor to the power sequencer and > names the target it wants to reach: > > pwrseq = devm_pwrseq_get(dev, "bluetooth"); > > The pwrseq core then knows that when the driver calls: > > pwrseq_power_on(pwrseq); > > It must enable the "bluetooth-enable" unit but it depends on the > "regulators-common" unit so this one is enabled first. The provider > driver is also in charge of assuring an appropriate delay between > enabling the BT and WLAN enable GPIOs. The WLAN-specific resources are > handled by the "wlan-enable" unit and so are not enabled until the WLAN > driver requests the "wlan" target to be powered on. > > Another thing worth discussing is the way we associate the consumer with > the relevant power sequencer. DT maintainers have expressed a discontent > with the existing mmc pwrseq bindings and have NAKed an earlier > initiative to introduce global pwrseq bindings to the kernel[1]. > > In this approach, we model the existing regulators and GPIOs in DT but > the pwrseq subsystem requires each provider to provide a .match() > callback. Whenever a consumer requests a power sequencer handle, we > iterate over the list of pwrseq drivers and call .match() for each. It's > up to the driver to verify in a platform-specific way whether it deals > with its consumer and let the core pwrseq code know. > > The advantage of this over reusing the regulator or reset subsystem is > that it's more generalized and can handle resources of all kinds as well > as deal with any kind of power-on sequences: for instance, Qualcomm has > a PCI switch they want a driver for but this switch requires enabling > some resources first (PCI pwrctl) and then configuring the device over > I2C (which can be handled by the pwrseq provider). > > Patch 17/18: > > This patch makes the Qualcomm Bluetooth driver get and use the power > sequencer for QCA6390. > > Patch 18/18: > > While tiny, this patch is possibly the highlight of the entire series. > It uses the two abstraction layers we introduced before to create an > elegant power sequencing PCI power control driver and supports the ath11k > module on QCA6390. > > With this series we can now enable BT and WLAN on several new Qualcomm > boards upstream. > > I tested the series on RB5 while Neil tested it on sm8650-qrd and > sm8550-qrd. Tested-by: Amit Pundir <amit.pundir@xxxxxxxxxx> # On RB5 running AOSP > > Best Regards, > Bartosz Golaszewski > > It's hard to list the changes between versions here as the scope changed > significantly between each iteration and some versions were not even full > series but rather RFCs for parts of the solution. For this reason, I'll > only start listing changes starting from v6. > > [*] This is what the docs say. In practice it seems that this delay can be > ignored. However the subsequent model - QCA6490 - *does* require users to > respect it, so the problem remains valid. > > [1] https://lore.kernel.org/netdev/20210829131305.534417-1-dmitry.baryshkov@xxxxxxxxxx/ > > Bartosz Golaszewski (15): > arm64: defconfig: enable ath12k as a module > dt-bindings: regulator: describe the PMU module of the QCA6390 package > dt-bindings: net: bluetooth: qualcomm: describe regulators for QCA6390 > dt-bindings: new: wireless: qcom,ath11k: describe the ath11k on > QCA6390 > dt-bindings: new: wireless: describe the ath12k PCI module > arm64: dts: qcom: qrb5165-rb5: model the PMU of the QCA6391 > PCI: hold the rescan mutex when scanning for the first time > PCI/pwrctl: reuse the OF node for power controlled devices > PCI/pwrctl: create platform devices for child OF nodes of the port > node > PCI/pwrctl: add PCI power control core code > PCI/pwrctl: add a power control driver for WCN7850 > power: sequencing: implement the pwrseq core > power: pwrseq: add a driver for the QCA6390 PMU module > Bluetooth: qca: use the power sequencer for QCA6390 > PCI/pwrctl: add a PCI power control driver for power sequenced devices > > Jonathan Cameron (1): > of: Add cleanup.h based auto release via __free(device_node) markings. > > Neil Armstrong (2): > arm64: dts: qcom: sm8550-qrd: add the Wifi node > arm64: dts: qcom: sm8650-qrd: add the Wifi node > > .../net/bluetooth/qualcomm-bluetooth.yaml | 17 + > .../net/wireless/qcom,ath11k-pci.yaml | 28 + > .../net/wireless/qcom,ath12k-pci.yaml | 103 ++ > .../bindings/regulator/qcom,qca6390-pmu.yaml | 166 +++ > MAINTAINERS | 8 + > arch/arm64/boot/dts/qcom/qrb5165-rb5.dts | 123 +- > arch/arm64/boot/dts/qcom/sm8250.dtsi | 10 + > arch/arm64/boot/dts/qcom/sm8550-qrd.dts | 37 + > arch/arm64/boot/dts/qcom/sm8550.dtsi | 10 + > arch/arm64/boot/dts/qcom/sm8650-qrd.dts | 29 + > arch/arm64/boot/dts/qcom/sm8650.dtsi | 10 + > arch/arm64/configs/defconfig | 1 + > drivers/bluetooth/hci_qca.c | 31 + > drivers/pci/Kconfig | 1 + > drivers/pci/Makefile | 1 + > drivers/pci/bus.c | 9 +- > drivers/pci/of.c | 14 +- > drivers/pci/probe.c | 2 + > drivers/pci/pwrctl/Kconfig | 25 + > drivers/pci/pwrctl/Makefile | 7 + > drivers/pci/pwrctl/core.c | 136 +++ > drivers/pci/pwrctl/pci-pwrctl-pwrseq.c | 84 ++ > drivers/pci/pwrctl/pci-pwrctl-wcn7850.c | 202 ++++ > drivers/pci/remove.c | 2 + > drivers/power/Kconfig | 1 + > drivers/power/Makefile | 1 + > drivers/power/sequencing/Kconfig | 28 + > drivers/power/sequencing/Makefile | 6 + > drivers/power/sequencing/core.c | 1065 +++++++++++++++++ > drivers/power/sequencing/pwrseq-qca6390.c | 353 ++++++ > include/linux/of.h | 2 + > include/linux/pci-pwrctl.h | 51 + > include/linux/pwrseq/consumer.h | 56 + > include/linux/pwrseq/provider.h | 75 ++ > 34 files changed, 2678 insertions(+), 16 deletions(-) > create mode 100644 Documentation/devicetree/bindings/net/wireless/qcom,ath12k-pci.yaml > create mode 100644 Documentation/devicetree/bindings/regulator/qcom,qca6390-pmu.yaml > create mode 100644 drivers/pci/pwrctl/Kconfig > create mode 100644 drivers/pci/pwrctl/Makefile > create mode 100644 drivers/pci/pwrctl/core.c > create mode 100644 drivers/pci/pwrctl/pci-pwrctl-pwrseq.c > create mode 100644 drivers/pci/pwrctl/pci-pwrctl-wcn7850.c > create mode 100644 drivers/power/sequencing/Kconfig > create mode 100644 drivers/power/sequencing/Makefile > create mode 100644 drivers/power/sequencing/core.c > create mode 100644 drivers/power/sequencing/pwrseq-qca6390.c > create mode 100644 include/linux/pci-pwrctl.h > create mode 100644 include/linux/pwrseq/consumer.h > create mode 100644 include/linux/pwrseq/provider.h > > -- > 2.40.1 > >