On Wed, 27 Oct 2021 at 17:09, Bjorn Andersson <bjorn.andersson@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > On Wed 27 Oct 07:24 PDT 2021, Ulf Hansson wrote: > > > On Wed, 27 Oct 2021 at 06:55, Bjorn Andersson > > <bjorn.andersson@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > > > > > On Tue 26 Oct 19:48 CDT 2021, Stephen Boyd wrote: > > > > > > > +Rajendra > > > > > > > > Quoting Bjorn Andersson (2021-10-25 19:48:02) > > > > > On Mon 25 Oct 15:41 PDT 2021, Stephen Boyd wrote: > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > When the binding was introduced I recall we punted on the parent child > > > > > > conversion stuff. One problem at a time. There's also the possibility > > > > > > for a power domain to be parented by multiple power domains so > > > > > > translation tables need to account for that. > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > But for this case - and below display case - the subdomain (the device's > > > > > power-domain) is just a dumb gate. So there is no translation, the given > > > > > performance_state applies to the parent. Or perhaps such implicitness > > > > > will come back and bite us? > > > > > > > > In the gate case I don't see how the implicitness will ever be a > > > > problem. > > > > > > > > > > > > > > I don't think we allow a power-domain to be a subdomain of two > > > > > power-domains - and again it's not applicable to USB or display afaict. > > > > > > > > Ah maybe. I always confuse power domains and genpd. > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > Or we may need to make another part of the OPP binding to indicate the > > > > > > > > relationship between the power domain and the OPP and the parent of > > > > > > > > the power domain. > > > > > > > > > > > > > > I suspect this would be useful if a power-domain provider needs to > > > > > > > translate a performance_state into a different supply-performance_state. > > > > > > > Not sure if we have such case currently; these examples are all an > > > > > > > adjustable power-domain with "gating" subdomains. > > > > > > > > > > > > Even for this case, we should be able to have the GDSC map the on state > > > > > > to some performance state in the parent domain. Maybe we need to add > > > > > > some code to the gdsc.c file to set a performance state on the parent > > > > > > domain when it is turned on. I'm not sure where the value for that perf > > > > > > state comes from. I guess we can hardcode it in the driver for now and > > > > > > if it needs to be multiple values based on the clk frequency we can push > > > > > > it out to an OPP table or something like that. > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > For the GDSC I believe we only have 1:1 mapping, so implementing > > > > > set_performance_state to just pass that on to the parent might do the > > > > > trick (although I haven't thought this through). > > > > > > > > > > Conceptually I guess this would be like calling clk_set_rate() on a > > > > > clock gate, relying on it being propagated upwards. The problem here is > > > > > that the performance_state is just a "random" integer without a well > > > > > defined unit. > > > > > > > > > > > > > Right. Ideally it would be in the core code somehow so that if there > > > > isn't a set_performance_state function we go to the parent or some > > > > special return value from the function says "call it on my parent". The > > > > translation scheme could come later so we can translate the "random" > > > > integer between parent-child domains. > > > > > > As a proof of concept it should be sufficient to just add an > > > implementation of sc->pd.set_performance_state in gdsc.c. But I agree > > > that it would be nice to push this into some framework code, perhaps > > > made opt-in by some GENPD_FLAG_xyz. > > > > > > > At the end of the day the device > > > > driver wants to set a frequency or runtime pm get the device and let the > > > > OPP table or power domain code figure out what the level is supposed to > > > > be. > > > > > > > > > > Yes and this is already working for the non-nested case - where the > > > single power-domain jumps between performance states as the opp code > > > switches from one opp to another. > > > > > > So if we can list only the child power-domain (i.e. the GDSC) and have > > > the performance_stat requests propagate up to the parent rpmhpd resource > > > I think we're good. > > > > > > > > > Let's give this a spin and confirm that this is the case... > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > The one case where I believe we talked about having different mapping > > > > > between the performance_state levels was in the relationship between CX > > > > > and MX. But I don't think we ever did anything about that... > > > > > > > > Hmm alright. I think there's a constraint but otherwise nobody really > > > > wants to change both at the same time. > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > Yes, a GDSC is really a gate on a parent power domain like CX or MMCX, > > > > > > etc. Is the display subsystem an example of different clk frequencies > > > > > > wanting to change the perf state of CX? If so it's a good place to work > > > > > > out the translation scheme for devices that aren't listing the CX power > > > > > > domain in DT. > > > > > > > > > > Yes, the various display components sits in MDSS_GDSC but the opp-tables > > > > > needs to change the performance_state of MDSS_GDSC->parent (i.e. CX or > > > > > MMCX, depending on platform). > > > > > > > > > > As I said, today we hack this by trusting that the base drm/msm driver > > > > > will keep MDSS_GDSC on and listing MMCX (or CX) as power-domain for each > > > > > of these components. > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > So if we solve this, then that seems to directly map to the static case > > > > > for USB as well. > > > > > > > > > > > > > Got it. So in this case we could have the various display components > > > > that are in the mdss gdsc domain set their frequency via OPP and then > > > > have that translate to a level in CX or MMCX. How do we parent the power > > > > domains outside of DT? I'm thinking that we'll need to do that if MMCX > > > > is parented by CX or something like that and the drivers for those two > > > > power domains are different. Is it basic string matching? > > > > > > In one way or another we need to invoke pm_genpd_add_subdomain() to link > > > the two power-domains (actually genpds) together, like what was done in > > > 3652265514f5 ("clk: qcom: gdsc: enable optional power domain support"). > > > > > > In the case of MMCX and CX, my impression of the documentation is that > > > they are independent - but if we need to express that CX is parent of > > > MMCX, they are both provided by rpmhpd which already supports this by > > > just specifying .parent on mmcx to point to cx. > > > > I was trying to follow the discussion, but it turned out to be a bit > > complicated to catch up and answer all things. In any case, let me > > just add a few overall comments, perhaps that can help to move things > > forward. > > > > Thanks for jumping in Ulf. > > > First, one domain can have two parent domains. Both from DT and from > > genpd point of view, just to make this clear. > > > > I was under the impression that the only such configuration we supported > was that we can explicitly attach and control multiple PDs from a > driver. I didn't think we could say that a given genpd is a subdomain of > multiple other genpds... > > That said, it's better if we can ignore this, as it doesn't apply to our > problem at hand. > > > Although, it certainly looks questionable to me, to hook up the USB > > device to two separate power domains, one to control power and one to > > control performance. Especially, if it's really the same piece of HW > > that is managing both things. Additionally, if it's correct to model > > the USB GDSC power domain as a child to the CX power domain from HW > > point of view, we should likely do that. > > > > So to clarify, we have the following situation: > > +---------------+ > | CX | > | +-----------+ | > | | USB_GDSC | | > | | +-------+ | | > | | | dwc3 | | | > | | +-------+ | | > | +-----------+ | > +---------------+ > > CX can operate at different performance_states, USB_GDSC can be toggled > on/off and hence dwc3 needs CX to operate at a performance_state meeting > its needs. > > The proposed patch is to list both CX and USB_GDSC as power-domains for > dwc3, in order for the required-opp in the dwc3 to affect CX. Okay. Then I need to point out that this looks wrong to me. We should be able to support the needs for dwc3, by letting CX to become the parent domain for USB_GDSC. If there is something missing from the genpd point of view, for example, let's fix that! > > > From the performance states point of view, genpd supports propagating > > performance states to parent domains, via a 1:1 mapping of the > > performance state. Note that, we have also quite recently made genpd's > > ->set_performance_state() callback to be optional. A vote for a > > performance state will be propagated to the parent domain, even if the > > child domain would lack the ->set_performance_state() callback. This > > should be useful, where a child domain relies on its parent domain for > > performance state management, which seems to be the case for the USB > > GDSC/CX power domains, right? > > > > I presume you're referring to the first half of > _genpd_set_performance_state(). This looks to be exactly what Stephen > and I discussed implementing. Yes. > > I had a rather messy tree when I looked at this last time, presumably > missing something else to hide this propagation. > > > For the USB_GDSC we today don't describe that as a subdomain of CX, but > per your guidance and the recently introduced 3652265514f5 ("clk: qcom: > gdsc: enable optional power domain support") we should be fairly close > to the solution. Great! > > > The one "problem" I can see is that I believe that some of the GDSCs in > GCC should be subdomains of MX, so the above referenced patch would then > need to be extended to allow specifying which of the multiple > power-domains each GDSC should be a subdomain of - something Dmitry and > I did discuss, but wasn't needed for the display GDSC. > Perhaps I'm just misinformed regarding this need though. I didn't quite follow all of this. But, perhaps using "#power-domain-cells = <2>" for the power-domain provider can help to specify this for the consumer/child-domain? > > > In regards to the parsing of the "required-opps" DT binding for a > > device node, I think that should work for cases like these, too. Or is > > there something missing around this? > > > > Given that Sandeep's proposed patch solves his problem without touching > the framework those patches (required-opps) must already have been > picked up. Right! Kind regards Uffe