On Thu, 7 Oct 2021 at 01:21, Dmitry Osipenko <digetx@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > 07.10.2021 01:01, Dmitry Osipenko пишет: > > 07.10.2021 00:14, Dmitry Osipenko пишет: > >> 06.10.2021 15:43, Ulf Hansson пишет: > >>> On Wed, 6 Oct 2021 at 00:43, Dmitry Osipenko <digetx@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: > >>>> > >>>> 06.10.2021 01:19, Dmitry Osipenko пишет: > >>>> ... > >>>>> I reproduced the OFF problem by removing the clk prepare/unprepare from > >>>>> the suspend/resume of the clk driver and making some extra changes to > >>>>> clock tree topology and etc to trigger the problem on Nexus 7. > >>>>> > >>>>> tegra-pmc 7000e400.pmc: failed to turn off PM domain heg: -13 > >>>>> > >>>>> It happens from genpd_suspend_noirq() -> tegra_genpd_power_off() -> clk > >>>>> -> GENPD -> I2C -> runtime-pm. > >>>>> > >>>>> -13 is EACCES, it comes from the runtime PM of I2C device. RPM is > >>>>> prohibited/disabled during late (NOIRQ) suspend by the drivers core. > >>>> > >>>> My bad, I double-checked and it's not I2C RPM that is failing now, but > >>>> the clock's RPM [1], which is also unavailable during NOIRQ. > >>> > >>> Yes, that sounds reasonable. > >>> > >>> You would then need a similar patch for the tegra clock driver as I > >>> suggested for tegra I2C driver. That should solve the problem, I > >>> think. > >>> > >>>> > >>>> [1] > >>>> https://elixir.free-electrons.com/linux/v5.15-rc4/source/drivers/clk/clk.c#L116 > >>>> > >>>> Previously it was I2C RPM that was failing in a similar way, but code > >>>> changed a tad since that time. > >>> > >>> Alright. In any case, as long as the devices gets suspended in the > >>> correct order, I think it should be fine to cook a patch along the > >>> lines of what I suggest for the I2C driver as well. > >>> > >>> It should work, I think. Although, maybe you want to avoid runtime > >>> resuming the I2C device, unless it's the device belonging to the PMIC > >>> interface, if there is a way to distinguish that for the driver. > >> > >> Ulf, thank you very much for the suggestions! I was thinking about this > >> all once again and concluded that the simplest variant will be to just > >> remove the suspend ops from the clk driver since neither of PLLs require > >> high voltage. We now have voltage bumped to a nominal level during > >> suspend by Tegra's regulator-coupler driver and it's much higher than > >> voltage needed by PLLs. So the problem I was trying to work around > >> doesn't really exist anymore. > > > > I hurried a bit with the conclusion, keep forgetting that I need to > > change the clock tree in order to test it all properly :/ It's not fixed > > yet. > > > > Please let me iterate once again. The problem we currently have is that > clock may be enabled during NOIRQ time. In order to enable clock, it > needs to be prepared. In order to prepare clock, the clock's device > needs to be runtime-resumed. The runtime PM is unavailable at the NOIRQ > time. > > To solve this problem we need to prepare clock beforehand. > > The clock will stay prepared during suspend, but this is not a problem > since all the clocks we care about don't require high voltage and > voltage is guaranteed to be bumped high during suspend by Tegra's > regulator-coupler driver anyways. > > So everything we need to do is to keep clocks prepared. There are two > options how to do that: > > [1] this patch which explicitly prepares clocks using clk API. > > [2] Use runtime PM API, like this: > > static const struct dev_pm_ops tegra_clock_pm = { > SET_SYSTEM_SLEEP_PM_OPS(pm_runtime_resume_and_get, pm_runtime_put) > }; > > Ulf, are you now okay with the current variant [1] of the patch or you > prefer the second [2] option more? I prefer option [2]. The clock_prepare|unprepare() thingy in option [1], looks more like an odd workaround to me. Does that make sense to you as well? Kind regards Uffe