18.08.2021 18:43, Dmitry Osipenko пишет: > 18.08.2021 13:08, Ulf Hansson пишет: >> On Wed, 18 Aug 2021 at 11:50, Viresh Kumar <viresh.kumar@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: >>> >>> On 18-08-21, 11:41, Ulf Hansson wrote: >>>> On Wed, 18 Aug 2021 at 11:14, Viresh Kumar <viresh.kumar@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: >>>>> What we need here is just configure. So something like this then: >>>>> >>>>> - genpd->get_performance_state() >>>>> -> dev_pm_opp_get_current_opp() //New API >>>>> -> dev_pm_genpd_set_performance_state(dev, current_opp->pstate); >>>>> >>>>> This can be done just once from probe() then. >>>> >>>> How would dev_pm_opp_get_current_opp() work? Do you have a suggestion? >>> >>> The opp core already has a way of finding current OPP, that's what >>> Dmitry is trying to use here. It finds it using clk_get_rate(), if >>> that is zero, it picks the lowest freq possible. >>> >>>> I am sure I understand the problem. When a device is getting probed, >>>> it needs to consume power, how else can the corresponding driver >>>> successfully probe it? >>> >>> Dmitry can answer that better, but a device doesn't necessarily need >>> to consume energy in probe. It can consume bus clock, like APB we >>> have, but the more energy consuming stuff can be left disabled until >>> the time a user comes up. Probe will just end up registering the >>> driver and initializing it. >> >> That's perfectly fine, as then it's likely that it won't vote for an >> OPP, but can postpone that as well. >> >> Perhaps the problem is rather that the HW may already carry a non-zero >> vote made from a bootloader. If the consumer driver tries to clear >> that vote (calling dev_pm_opp_set_rate(dev, 0), for example), it would >> still not lead to any updates of the performance state in genpd, >> because genpd internally has initialized the performance-state to >> zero. > > We don't need to discover internal SoC devices because we use > device-tree on ARM. For most devices power isn't required at a probe > time because probe function doesn't touch h/w at all, thus devices are > left in suspended state after probe. > > We have three components comprising PM on Tegra: > > 1. Power gate > 2. Clock state > 3. Voltage state > > GENPD on/off represents the 'power gate'. > > Clock and reset are controlled by device drivers using clk and rst APIs. > > Voltage state is represented by GENPD's performance level. OPP framework couples the performance level with the clock rate. > GENPD core assumes that at a first rpm-resume of a consumer device, its > genpd_performance=0. Not true for Tegra because h/w of the device is > preconfigured to a non-zero perf level initially, h/w may not support > zero level at all. > > GENPD core assumes that consumer devices can work at any performance > level. Not true for Tegra because voltage needs to be set in accordance > to the clock rate before clock is enabled, otherwise h/w won't work > properly, perhaps clock may be unstable or h/w won't be latching. > > Performance level should be set to 0 while device is suspended. > Performance level needs to be bumped on rpm-resume of a device in > accordance to h/w state before hardware is enabled. >