On 08/03/18 04:33, Tomasz Figa wrote:
On Thu, Mar 8, 2018 at 1:58 AM, Robin Murphy <robin.murphy@xxxxxxx> wrote:
On 07/03/18 13:52, Tomasz Figa wrote:
On Wed, Mar 7, 2018 at 9:38 PM, Robin Murphy <robin.murphy@xxxxxxx> wrote:
On 02/03/18 10:10, Vivek Gautam wrote:
From: Sricharan R <sricharan@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
The smmu device probe/remove and add/remove master device callbacks
gets called when the smmu is not linked to its master, that is without
the context of the master device. So calling runtime apis in those
places
separately.
Signed-off-by: Sricharan R <sricharan@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
[vivek: Cleanup pm runtime calls]
Signed-off-by: Vivek Gautam <vivek.gautam@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
---
drivers/iommu/arm-smmu.c | 96
++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++----
1 file changed, 88 insertions(+), 8 deletions(-)
diff --git a/drivers/iommu/arm-smmu.c b/drivers/iommu/arm-smmu.c
index c8b16f53f597..3d6a1875431f 100644
--- a/drivers/iommu/arm-smmu.c
+++ b/drivers/iommu/arm-smmu.c
@@ -209,6 +209,8 @@ struct arm_smmu_device {
struct clk_bulk_data *clks;
int num_clks;
+ bool rpm_supported;
+
Can we not automatically infer this from whether clocks and/or power
domains
are specified or not, then just use pm_runtime_enabled() as the fast-path
check as Tomasz originally proposed?
I wouldn't tie this to presence of clocks, since as a next step we
would want to actually control the clocks separately. (As far as I
understand, on QCom SoCs we might want to have runtime PM active for
the translation to work, but clocks gated whenever access to SMMU
registers is not needed.) Moreover, you might still have some super
high scale thousand-core systems that require clocks to be
prepare-enabled, but runtime PM would be undesirable for the reasons
we discussed before.
I worry that relying on statically-defined matchdata is just going to
blow
up the driver and DT binding into a maintenance nightmare; I really don't
want to start needing separate definitions for e.g.
"arm,juno-etr-mmu-401"
and "arm,juno-hdlcd-mmu-401" just because one otherwise-identical
instance
within the SoC is in a separate controllable power domain while the
others
aren't.
I don't see a reason why both couldn't just have RPM supported
regardless of whether there is a real power domain. It would
effectively be just a no-op for those that don't have one.
Because you're then effectively defining "compatible" values for the sake of
attaching software policy to them, rather than actually describing different
hardware implementations.
The fact that RPM can't do anything meaningful unless relevant clock/power
aspects *are* described, however, means that we shouldn't need additional
information redundant with that. Much like the fact that we don't *already*
have an "arm,juno-hdlcd-mmu-401" compatible to account for those being
integrated such that IDR0.CTTW has the wrong value, since the presence or
not of the "dma-coherent" property already describes the truth in that
regard.
Fair enough.
IMHO the
only reason to avoid having the RPM enabled is the scalability issue
we discussed before.
Yes, but that's kind of my point; in reality high throughput/minimal latency
and aggressive power management are more or less mutually exclusive. Mobile
SoCs with fine-grained clock trees and power domains won't have multiple
40GBe/NVMf/whatever links running flat out in parallel; conversely
networking/infrastructure/server SoCs aren't designed around saving every
last microamp of leakage current - even in the (fairly unlikely) case of the
interconnect clocks being software-gateable at all I would be very surprised
if that were ever exposed directly to Linux (FWIW I believe ACPI essentially
*requires* clocks to be abstracted behind firmware).
Realistically then, explicit clocks are only expected on systems which care
about power management. We can always revisit that assumption if anything
crazy where it isn't the case ever becomes non-theoretical, but for now it's
one I'm entirely comfortable with. If on the other hand it turns out that we
can rely on just a power domain being present wherever we want RPM, making
clocks moot, then all the better.
Alright. Since Qcom would be the only user of clock and power handling
for the time being, I think checking power domain presence could work
for us. +/- the fact that clocks need to be handled even if power
domain is not present, but we should normally always have both.
Great! (the issue of Qcom-specific clock handling is a separate argument
which I don't feel like reigniting just now...)
Now we need a way to do the check. Perhaps for the time being it would
be enough to just check for the power-domains property in DT?
AFAICS, it might be as simple as arm_smmu_probe() doing this:
/*
* We want to avoid touching dev->power.lock in fastpaths unless
* it's really going to do something useful - pm_runtime_enabled()
* can serve as an ideal proxy for that decision.
*/
if (dev->pm_domain)
pm_runtime_enable(dev);
or maybe even just gate all the calls with "if (smmu->dev.pm_domain)"
directly (like pcie-mediatek does), but I'm not sure which would be
conceptually cleaner.
Robin.
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