On Thu, Jan 03, 2013 at 09:55:14PM +0100, Uwe Kleine-König wrote: > Hi Thierry, > > On Thu, Jan 03, 2013 at 10:01:18AM +0100, Thierry Reding wrote: > > On Thu, Oct 25, 2012 at 04:03:49PM +0800, Shawn Guo wrote: > > > On Wed, Oct 24, 2012 at 03:52:46PM +0200, Uwe Kleine-König wrote: > > > > This fixes disabling the LED on i.MX28. The PWM hardware delays using > > > > the newly set pwm-config until the beginning of a new period. It's very > > > > likely that pwm_disable is called before the current period ends. In > > > > case the LED was on brightness=max before the LED stays on because in > > > > the disabled PWM block the period never ends. > > > > > > > > It's unclear if the mxs-pwm driver doesn't implement the API as expected > > > > (i.e. it should block until the newly set config is effective) or if the > > > > leds-pwm driver makes wrong assumptions. This patch assumes the latter. > > > > > > > > Signed-off-by: Uwe Kleine-König <u.kleine-koenig@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx> > > > > --- > > > > Hello, > > > > > > > > I'm not sure this is correct, but this is the workaround I'm using until > > > > I get some feed back. > > > > > > I'm fine with it, since it fixes a real problem. Let's see what > > > Thierry says. > > > > I lost track of this thread somehow, so sorry for not getting back to > > you earlier. The root cause of this problem seems to be that it isn't > > very well defined (actually not at all) what is supposed to happen in > > the case when a PWM is disabled. > > > > There really are only two ways forward: a) we need to write down what > > the PWM subsystem expects to happen when a PWM is disabled or b) keep > > the currently undefined behaviour. With the latter I expect this kind > > of issue to keep popping up every once in a while with all sorts of > > ad-hoc solutions being implemented to solve the problem. > > > > I think the best option would be to have some definition about what the > > PWM signal should look like after a call to pwm_disable(). However this > > doesn't turn out to be as trivial as it sounds. For instance, the most > > straightforward definition in my opinion would be to specify that a PWM > > signal should be constantly low after the call to pwm_disable(). It is > > what I think most people would assume is the natural disable state of a > > PWM. > > > > However, one case where a similar problem was encountered involved a > > hardware design that used an external inverter to change the polarity of > > a PWM signal that was used to drive a backlight. In such a case, if the > > controller were programmed to keep the output low when disabling, the > > display would in fact be fully lit. This is further complicated by the > > fact that the controller allows the output level of the disabled PWM > > signal to be configured. This is nice because it means that pretty much > > any scenario is covered, but it also doesn't make it any easier to put > > this into a generic framework. > > > > Having said that, I'm tempted to go with a simple definition like the > > above anyway and handle obscure cases with board-specific quirks. I > I don't understand what you mean with "the above" here. I guess it's > "PWM signal should be constantly low after the call to pwm_disable". Yes, exactly. > To cover this we could add a function pwm_disable_blurb() that accepts a > parameter specifying the desired signal state: "high", "low" or (maybe) > "don't care". pwm_disable would then (probably) mean > pwm_disable_blurb("don't care"). But maybe this already contradicts your > idea about being simple and clean?! I'm wondering if that's really necessary. This really seems more of a board-specific question. If you run pwm_disable() on a PWM device, it should be turned "off" (whatever that means in the context of a board design) after the call terminates. Part of the problem is that we want to keep the board-specific complexities out of client drivers. For instance in the case you encountered, the leds-pwm driver shouldn't have to know any of the details pertaining to the i.MX28. That is, leds-pwm should be able to call pwm_disable() if it wants to turn off the PWM signal. If we add pwm_disable_blurb() as you suggest, what is leds-pwm supposed to pass in? Usually this would be "low", but on other hardware (with additional inverter circuitry) it would be "high". We certainly don't want to have leds-pwm handling that kind of logic. The PWM signal polarity is entirely defined at the board-level and therefore should be handled by board setup code (or encoded in DT). > Also note that I had another/alternative issue with the API, i.e. when > the pwm routines should return. Right. All of the above would entail that pwm_config() should either block until the configuration is active, or alternatively that when pwm_disable() is called without the new configuration being active yet, it is pwm_disable() that needs to wait until the configuration becomes active. Another alternative would be that leds-pwm wouldn't have to call pwm_config() with a 0% duty cycle in the first place if pwm_disable() is guaranteed to force the PWM signal to constant low. Thierry
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