Re: [RESEND PATCH v16 4/4] ARM: dts: add the support power-domain node on RK3288 SoCs

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在 2015年08月26日 06:45, Kevin Hilman 写道:
Doug Anderson <dianders@xxxxxxxxxxxx> writes:

Kevin,

On Tue, Aug 25, 2015 at 2:07 PM, Kevin Hilman <khilman@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
Caesar Wang <wxt@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx> writes:

We can add more domains node in the future.
This patch add the needed clocks into power-controller.
As the discuess about all the device clocks being listed in
the power-domains itself.

There are several reasons as follows:

Firstly, the clocks need be turned off to save power when
the system enter the suspend state. So we need to enumerate
the clocks in the dts. In order to power domain can turn on and off.
Yes, but this is the job of device drivers which are runtime PM adapted
to gate their own clocks.  I agree these clocks need to be enumerated in
the DTS, but they should be in the device nodes.
I _think_ what Caesar means is that the alternative to this patch is
to leave the clocks on all the time as they were during the early days
of Rockchip (AKA last year).  If the clocks are on all the time then
the power domain patches can work fine.  However, once you start
letting clocks turn off then you need to make sure that the power
domain code turns the back on temporarily.
Yup, I understand that part, and many SoCs have this same "feature".

Secondly, the reset-circuit should reset be synchronous on RK3288,
then sync revoked. So we need to enable clocks of all devices.
In other words, we have to enable the clocks before you operate them
if all the device clocks are included in someone domians.
Yes, this is pretty common for reset.

Someone wish was to get the clocks by reading the clocks from the
device nodes, We can do that but we can solve the above issues.
I don't follow this sentence.  Are you saying doing that will not solve
the above issues?  Why not?  Please explain.

If there are non-device clocks that also need to be enabled before
asserting reset, then those are candidates for the power-domain node,
but not device clocks.
It's been a long time and I don't know that I've reviewed every
revision of this series, but I think there was a proposal that we
shouldn't list clocks here.  Instead we should search through and find
all devices that refer to this power domain, reach in and find their
clocks, and turn them on.  Did I get that right?
Yes...

Sounds resonable, the domain(e.g. "pd_vio"...) idle will be abnormal but you have registered all devices.
Why?
AFAIK, you need turn on the noc/ip clocks if we are operating the "pd_vio" domain to enter the idle status. if the noc is same clock with ip side. We need turn on the IP side clocks. Otherwise we need turn on the noc clocks.

To put things in a
concrete way, for pd_vio we'd go through the entire device tree
ourselves and find all properties that look like "power-domains =
<&power RK3288_PD_VIO>;".  We'd then find the parent of those
properties and look for a property named "clocks".  We'd then iterate
over all those clocks and turn those on.  Did I get that right?
... but you make it sound like more work than it is.  The genpd already
keeps a list of devices that refer to the power domain.  In fact, the
genpd 'attach' method can be platform-specific, so could be used to keep
track of a list (or a subset) of clocks which are needed for reset.

The above doesn't seem like a terribly great idea to me for a number
of reasons, including:

1. If I remember correctly, it's important to turn on clocks for
devices even if they're not something you're using / have a driver
for.  If you don't then the device won't get reset properly and this
can affect things like suspend/resume because the hardware in the SoC
will query all devices at suspend time to make sure they're ready.
Correct.  This condition also exists in the clock framework when unused
clocks are disabled, or if you have drivers but PM_RUNTIME is disabled
(which can happen from userspace on a per-device basis) so it needs to
be understood and managed already.

If
a device is wedged because its clock wasn't on at the right them then
it will cause problems.
Right.  I'm not arguing that the power domain doesn't have to deal with
device clocks. It has to for sync reset.  The objection I have have is
where these clocks are described.

2. If we absolutely need to turn all clocks and we get clocks from
device tree nodes on then it means we need device tree nodes for every
device in the domain.
Isn't that the end goal?

These would be needed even if there are no
accepted bindings for this device yet.  So we'd need to do one of: A)
Block power domain patches on feature complete bindings for all
drivers; B) Make up non-approved compatible strings for all devices
and throw them into the DTS; C) Add nodes in the DTS without a
compatible string just to satisfy the power domain requirements.  None
of these seem terribly appealing.
well, I think we can be slightly more accomodating than that and go for
somewhere in between:

D) In the power-domain DTS, clearly describe why each clock is needed by
the power-domain.  In particular list out clocks that are not device
clocks (and why they need to be asserted for reset) and separate those
from device clocks which are only listed in the power-domain because
there is not *yet* a driver/binding for that device node.

Doing it that way also makes it clear that when a new driver/binding is
added, the clocks should be removed from the power-domain node and put
into the device node.

Also, this addresses my primary concern that the DTS acurately describes
the hardware.  IOW, in hardware, most of these clocks are are properties
of devices, not power-domains, and the DT should reflect that.

IMO, if it's not describing the hardware, and is a placeholder until a
driver/binding is in place, it should be properly documented.

3. It is entirely possible that there are clocks that will be listed
in the individual devices that aren't needed for powering on the power
domain.  I'd tend to believe that PCLK_EDP_CTRL (the pixel clock)
doesn't really need to be turned on when adjusting the "VIO" power
domain.  Right now Caesar has it listed, but it probably isn't needed
(Caesar: can you confirm?).
Yes, I suspect there are several of those, which is also why I'd like to
see the clocks in the power-domain node described in detail, and exacly
why they're needed to be enabled.

Also, in the current proposed DTS, clocks that are listed in both device
nodes and the power domain are also suspicous, especially when the
device node doesn't have a power-domain property.  (c.f. vop[bl] nodes
and ACLK_VOP[01] clocks.)  For that matter, this series doesn't add any
devices to the power domains, which makes it even more confusing about
how this is meant to work.  IOW, with no devices belonging to
power-domains, how are the power-domain power_on/power_off callbacks
being called?

Okay, As the cover-letter lists.
We can add the EDP/VOP domain node to test in next-kernel.

Also, the chromium-3.14 has some devices to complete it.

https://chromium.googlesource.com/chromiumos/third_party/kernel/+/v3.14

----
Thanks,
Caesar


4. It seems just slightly brittle to be reaching into other device
nodes and making assumptions about their properties.  Yeah, it's
probably safe to assume that "clocks" has a list of clocks and
"power-domains" will point to something whose first entry is a
phandle, but it still seems just a tad bit like violating an
abstraction barrier.
shmobile is already doing this with platform-specific genpd attach
callbacks, and using the pm_clk API.  I don't see any issues with that.

Anyway, perhaps I'm misunderstanding, or perhaps my concerns are
simply not for important things.  If so feel free to yell at me.  ;)
No need for me to yell. Your concerns are perfectly valid, and it's not
my style anyways. ;)

Thanks for the feedback,

Kevin




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