On 02/06/2016 10:02 AM, Fu Wei wrote:
Hi Guenter,
On 6 February 2016 at 07:54, Guenter Roeck <linux@xxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
On 02/05/2016 10:21 AM, Fu Wei wrote:
On 5 February 2016 at 22:42, Guenter Roeck <linux@xxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
On 02/05/2016 01:51 AM, Fu Wei wrote:
Hi Guenter,
On 4 February 2016 at 13:17, Guenter Roeck <linux@xxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
On 02/03/2016 03:00 PM, Fu Wei wrote:
On 4 February 2016 at 02:45, Timur Tabi <timur@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
Fu Wei wrote:
As you know I have made the pre-timeout support patch, If people
like
it, i am happy to go on upstream it separately.
If we want to use pre-timeout here, user only can use get_pretimeout
and disable panic by setting pretimeout to 0
but user can not really set pretimeout, because "pre-timeout ==
timeout / 2 (always)".
if user want to change pretimeout, he/she has to set_time instead.
Ok, I think patches 4 and 5 should be combined, and I think the
Kconfig
entry should be removed and just use panic_enabled.
Agreed.
np, will do
NP, will update this patchset like that , thanks :-)
Also, if panic is enabled, the timeout needs to be adjusted accordingly
(to only panic after the entire timeout period has expired, not after
half of it). We can not panic the system after timeout / 2.
OK, my thought is
if panic is enabled :
|--------WOR-------WS0--------WOR-------WS1
|------timeout------(panic)------timeout-----reset
if panic is disabled .
|--------WOR-------WS0--------WOR-------WS1
|---------------------timeout---------------------reset
panic_enabled only can be configured when module is loaded by module
parameter
But user should know that max_timeout(panic_enable) =
max_timeout(panic_disable) / 2
That means you'll have to update max_timeout accordingly.
panic_enabled only can be configured when module is loaded, so we
don't need to update it.
max_timeout will only be set up in the init stage.
Does it make sense ? :-)
Not sure I understand your problem or question.
max_timeout will have to reflect the correct maximum timeout, under
all circumstances. It will have to be set to the correct value before
the watchdog driver is registered.
yes, understood, my thought is :
in static int sbsa_gwdt_probe(struct platform_device *pdev)
if (action) {
wdd->min_timeout = 1;
wdd->max_timeout = U32_MAX / gwdt->clk;
} else {
wdd->min_timeout = 2;
wdd->max_timeout = U32_MAX / gwdt->clk * 2;
Pretty much, though you would also have to adjust all calculations
using gwdt->clk, in both set_timeout() and get_timeout(). Wonder if
you could adjust gwdt->clk instead.
Does min_timeout really have to be 2 if panic is disabled ?
The only reason seems to be the calculation in sbsa_gwdt_set_timeout().
writel(timeout / 2 * gwdt->clk, gwdt->control_base + SBSA_GWDT_WOR);
Maybe you could use something like
writel(timeout * (gwdt->clk / 2), ...);
instead. Or, as mentioned above, adjust the value of gwdt->clk
to include the factor.
Thanks,
Guenter
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