Before this commit a suspend + resume of the LPSS PWM controller would result in the controller being reset to its defaults of output-freq = clock/256, duty-cycle=100%, until someone changes to the output-freq and/or duty-cycle are made. This problem has been masked so far because the main consumer (the i915 driver) was always making duty-cycle changes on resume. With the conversion of the i915 driver to the atomic PWM API the driver now only disables/enables the PWM on suspend/resume leaving the output-freq and duty as is, triggering this problem. The LPSS PWM controller has a mechanism where the ctrl register value and the actual base-unit and on-time-div values used are latched. When software sets the SW_UPDATE bit then at the end of the current PWM cycle, the new values from the ctrl-register will be latched into the actual registers, and the SW_UPDATE bit will be cleared. The problem is that before this commit our suspend/resume handling consisted of simply saving the PWM ctrl register on suspend and restoring it on resume, without setting the PWM_SW_UPDATE bit. When the controller has lost its state over a suspend/resume and thus has been reset to the defaults, just restoring the register is not enough. We must also set the SW_UPDATE bit to tell the controller to latch the restored values into the actual registers. Fixing this problem is not as simple as just or-ing in the value which is being restored with SW_UPDATE. If the PWM was enabled before we must write the new settings + PWM_SW_UPDATE before setting PWM_ENABLE. We must also wait for PWM_SW_UPDATE to become 0 again and depending on the model we must do this either before or after the setting of PWM_ENABLE. All the necessary logic for doing this is already present inside pwm_lpss_apply(), so instead of duplicating this inside the resume handler, this commit makes the resume handler use pwm_lpss_apply() to restore the settings when necessary. This fixes the output-freq and duty-cycle being reset to their defaults on resume. Signed-off-by: Hans de Goede <hdegoede@xxxxxxxxxx> --- Changes in v5: - The changes to pwm_lpss_apply() are much cleaner now thanks to the new pwm_lpss_prepare_enable() helper. Changes in v3: - This replaces the "pwm: lpss: Set SW_UPDATE bit when enabling the PWM" patch from previous versions of this patch-set, which really was a hack working around the resume issue which this patch fixes properly. --- drivers/pwm/pwm-lpss.c | 56 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++------ 1 file changed, 48 insertions(+), 8 deletions(-) diff --git a/drivers/pwm/pwm-lpss.c b/drivers/pwm/pwm-lpss.c index 8a136ba2a583..cf4eaf7ef2a2 100644 --- a/drivers/pwm/pwm-lpss.c +++ b/drivers/pwm/pwm-lpss.c @@ -143,29 +143,39 @@ static int pwm_lpss_prepare_enable(struct pwm_lpss_chip *lpwm, return 0; } -static int pwm_lpss_apply(struct pwm_chip *chip, struct pwm_device *pwm, - const struct pwm_state *state) +static int __pwm_lpss_apply(struct pwm_chip *chip, struct pwm_device *pwm, + const struct pwm_state *state, bool from_resume) { struct pwm_lpss_chip *lpwm = to_lpwm(chip); int ret = 0; if (state->enabled) { if (!pwm_is_enabled(pwm)) { - pm_runtime_get_sync(chip->dev); + if (!from_resume) + pm_runtime_get_sync(chip->dev); + ret = pwm_lpss_prepare_enable(lpwm, pwm, state, true); - if (ret) + if (ret && !from_resume) pm_runtime_put(chip->dev); } else { ret = pwm_lpss_prepare_enable(lpwm, pwm, state, false); } } else if (pwm_is_enabled(pwm)) { pwm_lpss_write(pwm, pwm_lpss_read(pwm) & ~PWM_ENABLE); - pm_runtime_put(chip->dev); + + if (!from_resume) + pm_runtime_put(chip->dev); } return ret; } +static int pwm_lpss_apply(struct pwm_chip *chip, struct pwm_device *pwm, + const struct pwm_state *state) +{ + return __pwm_lpss_apply(chip, pwm, state, false); +} + static void pwm_lpss_get_state(struct pwm_chip *chip, struct pwm_device *pwm, struct pwm_state *state) { @@ -278,10 +288,40 @@ EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL(pwm_lpss_suspend); int pwm_lpss_resume(struct device *dev) { struct pwm_lpss_chip *lpwm = dev_get_drvdata(dev); - int i; + struct pwm_state saved_state; + struct pwm_device *pwm; + int i, ret; + u32 ctrl; - for (i = 0; i < lpwm->info->npwm; i++) - writel(lpwm->saved_ctrl[i], lpwm->regs + i * PWM_SIZE + PWM); + for (i = 0; i < lpwm->info->npwm; i++) { + pwm = &lpwm->chip.pwms[i]; + + ctrl = pwm_lpss_read(pwm); + /* If we did not reach S0i3/S3 the controller keeps its state */ + if (ctrl == lpwm->saved_ctrl[i]) + continue; + + /* + * We cannot just blindly restore the old value here. Since we + * are changing the settings we must set SW_UPDATE and if the + * PWM was enabled before we must write the new settings + + * PWM_SW_UPDATE before setting PWM_ENABLE. We must also wait + * for PWM_SW_UPDATE to become 0 again and depending on the + * model we must do this either before or after the setting of + * PWM_ENABLE. + * So instead of reproducing all the code from pwm_apply() here, + * we just reapply the state as stored in pwm->state. + */ + saved_state = pwm->state; + /* + * Update enabled to its actual setting for the + * enabled<->disabled transitions inside apply(). + */ + pwm->state.enabled = !!(ctrl & PWM_ENABLE); + ret = __pwm_lpss_apply(&lpwm->chip, pwm, &saved_state, true); + if (ret) + dev_err(dev, "Error restoring state on resume\n"); + } return 0; } -- 2.26.2 _______________________________________________ Intel-gfx mailing list Intel-gfx@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx https://lists.freedesktop.org/mailman/listinfo/intel-gfx