On Tue, 22 Jun 2021 at 17:38, Mark Brown <broonie@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > On Tue, Jun 22, 2021 at 05:17:28PM +0300, Dmitry Baryshkov wrote: > > On Tue, 22 Jun 2021 at 14:29, Mark Brown <broonie@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > > On Tue, Jun 22, 2021 at 01:31:36AM +0300, Dmitry Baryshkov wrote: > > > > > Qualcomm QCA6390/1 is a family of WiFi + Bluetooth SoCs, with BT part > > > > being controlled through the UART and WiFi being present on PCIe > > > > bus. Both blocks share common power sources. Add device driver handling > > > > power sequencing of QCA6390/1. > > > > Are you sure this is a regulator and not a MFD? It appears to be a > > > consumer driver that turns on and off a bunch of regulators en masse > > > which for some reason exposes that on/off control as a single supply. > > > This looks like it'd be much more appropriate to implement as a MFD or > > > possibly power domain with the subdevices using runtime PM, it's clearly > > > not a regulator. > > > First attempt was designed to be an MFD. And Lee clearly stated that > > this is wrong: > > "This is not an MFD, since it utilised neither the MFD API nor > > of_platform_populate() to register child devices." [1] > > Well, perhaps it should do one of those things then? I don't think so. BT part is just a serdev sitting on top of UART, WiFi is PCIe device (for qca6390). So using MFD API (which primarily targets platform devices) does not seem logical and feasible. > Like I say this is > very clearly not a regulator, it looks like a consumer of some kind. > The regulator API isn't there just to absorb things that need reference > counting, it's there to represent things providing supplies. This seems > to be very clearly not a supply given that it's grouping together a > bunch of other supplies and switching them on and off together without > providing a clear output supply. Ack. > > I've tried following Rob's suggestions on implementing things clearly, > > but doing so results in too big restructure just for a single device. > > I don't know what that suggestion was? If there's only one device that > uses this why is it not implemented as part of that device? One device = qca6390 (or 91). Because it is still a device sitting on a PCI bus which is typically discoverable, while adding power sequencer to the device driver would demand making the bus fully descibiable (like PCI bus is on Spark). > > > > +static int qca6390_enable(struct regulator_dev *rdev) > > > > +{ > > > > + struct qca6390_data *data = rdev_get_drvdata(rdev); > > > > + int ret; > > > > > + ret = regulator_bulk_enable(data->num_vregs, data->regulators); > > > > + if (ret) { > > > > + dev_err(data->dev, "Failed to enable regulators"); > > > > + return ret; > > > > + } > > > > The regulator API is *not* recursive, I am astonished this works. > > > It does, even with lockdep enabled. Moreover BT regularly does disable > > and enable this regulator, so both enable and disable paths were well > > tested. > > Should I change this into some internal call to remove API recursiveness? > > You should not be implementing this as a regulator at all. Ack -- With best wishes Dmitry