On Wed, 18 Aug 2021 at 11:50, Viresh Kumar <viresh.kumar@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > On 18-08-21, 11:41, Ulf Hansson wrote: > > On Wed, 18 Aug 2021 at 11:14, Viresh Kumar <viresh.kumar@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > > What we need here is just configure. So something like this then: > > > > > > - genpd->get_performance_state() > > > -> dev_pm_opp_get_current_opp() //New API > > > -> dev_pm_genpd_set_performance_state(dev, current_opp->pstate); > > > > > > This can be done just once from probe() then. > > > > How would dev_pm_opp_get_current_opp() work? Do you have a suggestion? > > The opp core already has a way of finding current OPP, that's what > Dmitry is trying to use here. It finds it using clk_get_rate(), if > that is zero, it picks the lowest freq possible. > > > I am sure I understand the problem. When a device is getting probed, > > it needs to consume power, how else can the corresponding driver > > successfully probe it? > > Dmitry can answer that better, but a device doesn't necessarily need > to consume energy in probe. It can consume bus clock, like APB we > have, but the more energy consuming stuff can be left disabled until > the time a user comes up. Probe will just end up registering the > driver and initializing it. That's perfectly fine, as then it's likely that it won't vote for an OPP, but can postpone that as well. Perhaps the problem is rather that the HW may already carry a non-zero vote made from a bootloader. If the consumer driver tries to clear that vote (calling dev_pm_opp_set_rate(dev, 0), for example), it would still not lead to any updates of the performance state in genpd, because genpd internally has initialized the performance-state to zero. Dmitry? > > -- > viresh Kind regards Uffe