Am Montag, 3. Juni 2024, 06:51:58 CEST schrieb Dragan Simic: > On 2024-06-03 06:41, Dragan Simic wrote: > > On 2024-06-03 05:49, Chen-Yu Tsai wrote: > >> On Sat, Jun 1, 2024 at 6:41 AM Dragan Simic <dsimic@xxxxxxxxxxx> > >> wrote: > >>> On 2024-05-31 20:40, Heiko Stübner wrote: > >>> > Am Freitag, 31. Mai 2024, 00:48:45 CEST schrieb Dragan Simic: > >>> >> On 2024-05-29 18:27, Chen-Yu Tsai wrote: > >>> >> > On Tue, May 21, 2024 at 1:20 AM Dragan Simic <dsimic@xxxxxxxxxxx> > >>> >> > wrote: > >>> >> >> > >>> >> >> Correct the specified regulator-min-microvolt value for the buck > >>> >> >> DCDC_REG2 > >>> >> >> regulator, which is part of the Rockchip RK809 PMIC, in the Pine64 > >>> >> >> Quartz64 > >>> >> >> Model B board dts. According to the RK809 datasheet, version 1.01, > >>> >> >> this > >>> >> >> regulator is capable of producing voltages as low as 0.5 V on its > >>> >> >> output, > >>> >> >> instead of going down to 0.9 V only, which is additionally confirmed > >>> >> >> by the > >>> >> >> regulator-min-microvolt values found in the board dts files for the > >>> >> >> other > >>> >> >> supported boards that use the same RK809 PMIC. > >>> >> >> > >>> >> >> This allows the DVFS to clock the GPU on the Quartz64 Model B below > >>> >> >> 700 MHz, > >>> >> >> all the way down to 200 MHz, which saves some power and reduces the > >>> >> >> amount of > >>> >> >> generated heat a bit, improving the thermal headroom and possibly > >>> >> >> improving > >>> >> >> the bursty CPU and GPU performance on this board. > >>> >> >> > >>> >> >> This also eliminates the following warnings in the kernel log: > >>> >> >> > >>> >> >> core: _opp_supported_by_regulators: OPP minuV: 825000 maxuV: 825000, > >>> >> >> not supported by regulator > >>> >> >> panfrost fde60000.gpu: _opp_add: OPP not supported by regulators > >>> >> >> (200000000) > >>> >> >> core: _opp_supported_by_regulators: OPP minuV: 825000 maxuV: 825000, > >>> >> >> not supported by regulator > >>> >> >> panfrost fde60000.gpu: _opp_add: OPP not supported by regulators > >>> >> >> (300000000) > >>> >> >> core: _opp_supported_by_regulators: OPP minuV: 825000 maxuV: 825000, > >>> >> >> not supported by regulator > >>> >> >> panfrost fde60000.gpu: _opp_add: OPP not supported by regulators > >>> >> >> (400000000) > >>> >> >> core: _opp_supported_by_regulators: OPP minuV: 825000 maxuV: 825000, > >>> >> >> not supported by regulator > >>> >> >> panfrost fde60000.gpu: _opp_add: OPP not supported by regulators > >>> >> >> (600000000) > >>> >> >> > >>> >> >> Fixes: dcc8c66bef79 ("arm64: dts: rockchip: add Pine64 Quartz64-B > >>> >> >> device tree") > >>> >> >> Cc: stable@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx > >>> >> >> Reported-By: Diederik de Haas <didi.debian@xxxxxxxxx> > >>> >> >> Signed-off-by: Dragan Simic <dsimic@xxxxxxxxxxx> > >>> >> >> --- > >>> >> >> arch/arm64/boot/dts/rockchip/rk3566-quartz64-b.dts | 2 +- > >>> >> >> 1 file changed, 1 insertion(+), 1 deletion(-) > >>> >> >> > >>> >> >> diff --git a/arch/arm64/boot/dts/rockchip/rk3566-quartz64-b.dts > >>> >> >> b/arch/arm64/boot/dts/rockchip/rk3566-quartz64-b.dts > >>> >> >> index 26322a358d91..b908ce006c26 100644 > >>> >> >> --- a/arch/arm64/boot/dts/rockchip/rk3566-quartz64-b.dts > >>> >> >> +++ b/arch/arm64/boot/dts/rockchip/rk3566-quartz64-b.dts > >>> >> >> @@ -289,7 +289,7 @@ vdd_gpu: DCDC_REG2 { > >>> >> >> regulator-name = "vdd_gpu"; > >>> >> >> regulator-always-on; > >>> >> >> regulator-boot-on; > >>> >> >> - regulator-min-microvolt = <900000>; > >>> >> >> + regulator-min-microvolt = <500000>; > >>> >> > > >>> >> > The constraints here are supposed to be the constraints of the > >>> >> > consumer, > >>> >> > not the provider. The latter is already known by the implementation. > >>> >> > > >>> >> > So if the GPU can go down to 0.825V or 0.81V even (based on the > >>> >> > datasheet), > >>> >> > this should say the corresponding value. Surely the GPU can't go down > >>> >> > to > >>> >> > 0.5V? > >>> >> > > >>> >> > Can you send another fix for it? > >>> >> > >>> >> I can confirm that the voltage of the power supply of GPU found inside > >>> >> the RK3566 can be as low as 0.81 V, according to the datasheet, or as > >>> >> low as 0.825 V, according to the GPU OPPs found in rk356x.dtsi. > >>> >> > >>> >> If we want the regulator-min-microvolt parameter to reflect the > >>> >> contraint > >>> >> of the GPU as the consumer, which I agree with, we should do that for > >>> >> other > >>> >> RK3566-based boards as well, and almost surely for the boards based on > >>> >> the > >>> >> RK3568, too. > >>> > > >>> > Hmm, I'm not so sure about that. > >>> > > >>> > The binding does define: > >>> > regulator-min-microvolt: > >>> > description: smallest voltage consumers may set > >>> > > >>> > This does not seem to describe it as a constraint solely of the > >>> > consumer. > >>> > At least the wording sounds way more flexible there. > >>> > > >>> > Also any regulator _could_ have multiple consumers, whose value would > >>> > it need then. > >>> > >>> The way I see it, the regulator-min-microvolt and > >>> regulator-max-microvolt > >>> parameters should be configured in a way that protects the > >>> consumer(s) > >>> of the particular voltage regulator against undervoltage and > >>> overvoltage > >>> conditions, which may be useful in some corner cases. > >>> > >>> If there are multiple consumers, which in this case may actually > >>> happen > >>> (IIRC, some boards use the same regulator for the GPU and NPU > >>> portions > >>> of the SoC), the situation becomes far from ideal, because the > >>> consumers > >>> might have different voltage requirements, but that's pretty much an > >>> unavoidable compromise. > >> > >> As Dragan mentioned, the min/max voltage constraints are there to > >> prevent > >> the implementation from setting a voltage that would make the hardware > >> inoperable, either temporarily or permanently. So the range set here > >> should be the intersection of the permitted ranges of all consumers on > >> that power rail. > >> > >> Now if that intersection happens to be an empty set, then it would up > >> to the implementation to do proper lock-outs. Hopefully no one designs > >> such hardware as it's too easy to fry some part of the hardware. > > > > Yes, such a hardware design would need fixing first on the schematic > > level. When it comes to the RK3566's GPU and NPU sharing the same > > regulator, we should be fine because the RK3566 datasheet states that > > both the GPU and the NPU can go as low as 0.81 V, and their upper > > absolute ratings are the same at 1.2 V, so 1.0 V, which is as far as > > the GPU OPPs go, should be fine for both. > > > > As a note, neither the RK3566 datasheet nor the RK3566 hardware design > > guide specify the recommended upper voltage limit for the GPU or the > > NPU. Though, their upper absolute ratings are the same, as already > > described above. > > Uh-oh, this rabbit hole goes much deeper than expected. After a quick > check, I see there are also RK3399-based boards/devices that specify > the minimum and maximum values for their GPU regulators far outside > the recommended operating conditions of the RK3399's GPU. > > Perhaps the scope of the upcoming patches should be expanded to cover > other boards as well, not just those based on the RK356x. > > >>> > While true, setting it to the lowest the regulator can do in the > >>> > original > >>> > fix patch, might've been a bit much and a saner value might be better. > >>> > >>> Agreed, but the value was selected according to what the other > >>> RK3566-based > >>> boards use, to establish some kind of consistency. Now, there's a > >>> good > >>> chance for the second pass, so to speak, which should establish > >>> another > >>> different state, but also consistent. :) > >>> > >>> >> This would ensure consistency, but I'd like to know are all those > >>> >> resulting > >>> >> patches going to be accepted before starting to prepare them? There > >>> >> will > >>> >> be a whole bunch of small patches. > >>> > > >>> > Hmm, though I'd say that would be one patch per soc? > >>> > > >>> > I.e. you're setting the min-voltage of _one_ regulator used > >>> > on each board to a value to support the defined OPPs. > >>> > > >>> > I.e. in my mind you'd end up with: > >>> > arm64: dts: rockchip: set better min voltage for vdd_gpu on rk356x > >>> > boards > >>> > > >>> > And setting the lower voltage to reach that lower OPP on all affected > >>> > rk356x boards. > >>> > >>> Yes, the same thoughts have already crossed my mind, but I thought > >>> we'd > >>> like those patches to also include Fixes tags, so they also get > >>> propagated > >>> into the long-term kernel versions? In that case, we'd need one > >>> patch > >>> per > >>> board, to have a clear relation to the commits referenced in the > >>> Fixes > >>> tags. > >>> > >>> OTOH, if we don't want the patches to be propagated into the > >>> long-term > >>> kernel > >>> versions, then having one patch per SoC would be perfectly fine. > >> > >> It's really up to Heiko, but personally I don't think it's that > >> important > >> to have them backported. These would be correctness patches, but don't > >> really affect functionality. > > > > On second thought, I also think that it might be better not to have > > these changes propagated into the long-term kernel versions. That > > would keep the amount of backported changes to the bare minimum, i.e. > > containing just the really important fixes, while these changes are > > more on the correctness side. Maybe together with providing a bit > > of additional safety. hehe, up to you I guess :-) . At least we tied down the how (one patch per soc or so) and not meant to be backported because more of the correctnes side. So yes I agree with the arguments for changing the constraints. Heiko