On 01/25/2011 10:31 AM, Julia Lawall wrote: > On Tue, 25 Jan 2011, Ryan Mallon wrote: > >> On 01/25/2011 10:01 AM, Julia Lawall wrote: >>> On Tue, 25 Jan 2011, Ryan Mallon wrote: >>> >>>> On 01/25/2011 09:28 AM, Julia Lawall wrote: >>>>>> Julia is correct. Some architectures can return NULL from clk_get, but I >>>>>> didn't check the at91 before posting :-/. If we can't return NULL from >>>>>> clk_get then we shouldn't bother checking for it. I do think we should >>>>>> drop the !IS_ERR(clk_get(dev, func)) check though. >>>>> >>>>> It seems a bit subtle, because the clk manipulated by clk_get in the call >>>>> of clk_get(dev, func) is not necessarily the same as the one in >>>>> clock_associate. But perhaps this is the only possibility in practice? >>>> >>>> Not sure I follow. The at91 clk_get does not modify the clk. In >>>> at91_clock_associate we have: >>>> >>>> clk->function = func; >>>> clk->dev = dev; >>>> >>>> and in clk_get we have: >>>> >>>> if (clk->function && (dev == clk->dev) && >>>> strcmp(id, clk->function) == 0) >>>> return clk; >>>> >>>> So at91_clock_associate sets the function for a clock, and clk_get >>>> returns clocks based on the function association if the name lookup >>>> fails. The only caveat to this is that the the clock function name >>>> (clk->function) is not the same as any others clock's clk->name. >>> >>> Right, that was what I was worried about. That one would find the same >>> information already present but somewhere else. But perhaps it can't >>> happen, or it doesn't matter if it does? >> >> I think that users are expected to ensure that clock names and clock >> function names do not overlap. > > One can't have a clock with a different name but the same device and > function? You could, but it would not be helpful. Clock associations are used so that _different_ devices can have the same function and map to the correct clock. This is used when there are multiple instances of a single peripheral. For example, the uart clocks work like this: at91_clock_associate("usart1_clk", &pdev->dev, "usart"); so then you can do this in a driver: uart_clk = clk_get(&pdev->dev, "usart"); Rather than: uart_clk = clk_get(NULL, "usart1_clk"); The former will find the correct uart clock for the device. Because each uart is a separate device the correct clock will be selected for each uart. My point was that there should be no overlap between clk->name and clk->function otherwise clk_get will not be able to return the correct clock. ~Ryan -- Bluewater Systems Ltd - ARM Technology Solution Centre Ryan Mallon 5 Amuri Park, 404 Barbadoes St ryan@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx PO Box 13 889, Christchurch 8013 http://www.bluewatersys.com New Zealand Phone: +64 3 3779127 Freecall: Australia 1800 148 751 Fax: +64 3 3779135 USA 1800 261 2934 -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe kernel-janitors" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html