Quoting Sibi Sankar (2021-08-05 10:47:20) > Stephen, > > Thanks for taking time to review > the series. > > On 2021-08-05 00:31, Stephen Boyd wrote: > > Quoting Sibi Sankar (2021-07-29 11:04:43) > >> Qualcomm SoCs (starting with SM8350) support per core voting for L3 > >> cache > >> frequency. > > > > And the L3 cache frequency voting code can't be put into this cpufreq > > driver? > > Yes, it could have gone either into > the cpufreq driver or l3 interconnect > provider driver. Taniya/Odelu preferred > the latter, because of the need for other > clients to vote for l3 frequencies in > the future. What other clients are those? > The other option to prevent > register re-arrangement would involve > using syscons from the cpufreq node, which > really wasn't necessary since there > wasn't any register overlap between the > two drivers. Let's not do that. > > > > >> So, re-arrange the cpufreq register offsets to allow access for > >> the L3 interconnect to implement per core control. Also prevent > >> binding > >> breakage caused by register offset shuffling by using the > >> SM8250/SM8350 > >> EPSS compatible. > >> > >> Fixes: 7dbd121a2c58 ("arm64: dts: qcom: sc7280: Add cpufreq hw node") > >> Signed-off-by: Sibi Sankar <sibis@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx> > >> --- > >> drivers/cpufreq/qcom-cpufreq-hw.c | 23 +++++++++++++++++++---- > >> 1 file changed, 19 insertions(+), 4 deletions(-) > >> > >> diff --git a/drivers/cpufreq/qcom-cpufreq-hw.c > >> b/drivers/cpufreq/qcom-cpufreq-hw.c > >> index f86859bf76f1..74ef3b38343b 100644 > >> --- a/drivers/cpufreq/qcom-cpufreq-hw.c > >> +++ b/drivers/cpufreq/qcom-cpufreq-hw.c > >> @@ -28,6 +28,7 @@ struct qcom_cpufreq_soc_data { > >> u32 reg_volt_lut; > >> u32 reg_perf_state; > >> u8 lut_row_size; > >> + bool skip_enable; > >> }; > >> > >> struct qcom_cpufreq_data { > >> @@ -257,19 +258,31 @@ static const struct qcom_cpufreq_soc_data > >> qcom_soc_data = { > >> .reg_volt_lut = 0x114, > >> .reg_perf_state = 0x920, > >> .lut_row_size = 32, > >> + .skip_enable = false, > >> }; > >> > >> static const struct qcom_cpufreq_soc_data epss_soc_data = { > >> + .reg_freq_lut = 0x0, > >> + .reg_volt_lut = 0x100, > >> + .reg_perf_state = 0x220, > >> + .lut_row_size = 4, > >> + .skip_enable = true, > >> +}; > >> + > >> +static const struct qcom_cpufreq_soc_data epss_sm8250_soc_data = { > >> .reg_enable = 0x0, > >> .reg_freq_lut = 0x100, > >> .reg_volt_lut = 0x200, > >> .reg_perf_state = 0x320, > >> .lut_row_size = 4, > >> + .skip_enable = false, > >> }; > >> > >> static const struct of_device_id qcom_cpufreq_hw_match[] = { > >> { .compatible = "qcom,cpufreq-hw", .data = &qcom_soc_data }, > >> { .compatible = "qcom,cpufreq-epss", .data = &epss_soc_data }, > >> + { .compatible = "qcom,sm8250-cpufreq-epss", .data = > >> &epss_sm8250_soc_data }, > >> + { .compatible = "qcom,sm8350-cpufreq-epss", .data = > >> &epss_sm8250_soc_data }, > >> {} > >> }; > >> MODULE_DEVICE_TABLE(of, qcom_cpufreq_hw_match); > >> @@ -334,10 +347,12 @@ static int qcom_cpufreq_hw_cpu_init(struct > >> cpufreq_policy *policy) > >> data->res = res; > >> > >> /* HW should be in enabled state to proceed */ > > > > It looks odd that we're no longer making sure that the clk domain is > > enabled when we probe the driver. Why is that OK? > > On newer EPSS hw it's no longer > required to perform the additional > hw enable check. IIRC we don't do > that on corresponding downstream > kernels as well. It's fairly clear that we no longer perform the additional check. The question is why that's OK.