On 11/30/22 10:34, Dipen Patel wrote: >> I think the wording can be better: > I do not understand, can you please elaborate? Exactly where? Please quote appropriate hunks from below where do you not understand. >> >> ---- >8 ---- >> >> diff --git a/Documentation/driver-api/hte/tegra194-hte.rst b/Documentation/driver-api/hte/tegra194-hte.rst >> index 85e654772782c1..13c45bfc03a75e 100644 >> --- a/Documentation/driver-api/hte/tegra194-hte.rst >> +++ b/Documentation/driver-api/hte/tegra194-hte.rst >> @@ -5,11 +5,11 @@ HTE Kernel provider driver >> >> Description >> ----------- >> -The Nvidia tegra HTE provider also known as GTE (Generic Timestamping Engine) >> -driver implements two GTE instances: 1) GPIO GTE and 2) LIC >> -(Legacy Interrupt Controller) IRQ GTE. Both GTE instances get the timestamp >> -from the system counter TSC which has 31.25MHz clock rate, and the driver >> -converts clock tick rate to nanoseconds before storing it as timestamp value. >> +The Nvidia tegra HTE provider, also known as GTE (Generic Timestamping Engine) >> +driver implements two GTE instances: GPIO GTE and LIC (Legacy Interrupt >> +Controller) IRQ GTE. Both GTE instances get the timestamp from system counter >> +TSC which has 31.25MHz clock rate, and the driver converts clock tick rate to >> +nanoseconds before storing it as timestamp value. >> >> GPIO GTE >> -------- >> @@ -19,17 +19,17 @@ needs to be configured as input. Only the always on (AON) GPIO controller >> instance supports timestamping GPIOs in real time as it is tightly coupled with >> the GPIO GTE. To support this, GPIOLIB adds two optional APIs as mentioned >> below. The GPIO GTE code supports both kernel and userspace consumers. The >> -kernel space consumers can directly talk to HTE subsystem while userspace >> -consumers timestamp requests go through GPIOLIB CDEV framework to HTE >> -subsystem. The hte devicetree binding described at >> -``Documentation/devicetree/bindings/timestamp`` provides an example of how a >> -consumer can request an GPIO line. >> +kernel space consumers can directly talk to HTE subsystem while requests from >> +userspace consumers go through GPIOLIB CDEV framework to HTE subsystem. The hte >> +devicetree binding described at ``Documentation/devicetree/bindings/timestamp`` >> +provides an example of how a consumer can request an GPIO line. >> >> -See gpiod_enable_hw_timestamp_ns() and gpiod_disable_hw_timestamp_ns(). >> +To toggle hardware timestamp, use gpiod_enable_hw_timestamp_ns() and >> +gpiod_disable_hw_timestamp_ns(). >> >> For userspace consumers, GPIO_V2_LINE_FLAG_EVENT_CLOCK_HTE flag must be >> -specified during IOCTL calls. Refer to ``tools/gpio/gpio-event-mon.c``, which >> -returns the timestamp in nanoseconds. >> +specified during IOCTL calls. Refer to ``tools/gpio/gpio-event-mon.c`` for >> +example. >> >> LIC (Legacy Interrupt Controller) IRQ GTE >> ----------------------------------------- >> Thanks anyway. -- An old man doll... just what I always wanted! - Clara