Several of our upstream and soon-to-be upstream SoC CAMSS dtsi declare csiphyX as opposed to the older clock name csiX_phy. For newer SoCs csiphyX turns out to be a clock you really need to set. On sc8280xp for example we will encounter difficult to track down and root-cause RX CRC errors without setting the csiX_phy clock. On sdm845 and sm8250 we declare the csiXphy clock but seem to get away with not setting it. The right approach here is to set the clock when it is declared. If a SoC doesn't require or a SoC driver implementer doesn't think we need, then the clock ought to simply be omitted from the clock list. Include csiphyX in the set of permissible strings which will subsequently lead to the csiphyX clock being set during csiphy_set_clock_rates() phase. Signed-off-by: Bryan O'Donoghue <bryan.odonoghue@xxxxxxxxxx> --- drivers/media/platform/qcom/camss/camss-csiphy.c | 4 ++++ 1 file changed, 4 insertions(+) diff --git a/drivers/media/platform/qcom/camss/camss-csiphy.c b/drivers/media/platform/qcom/camss/camss-csiphy.c index baf78c525fbfc..d9c751f457703 100644 --- a/drivers/media/platform/qcom/camss/camss-csiphy.c +++ b/drivers/media/platform/qcom/camss/camss-csiphy.c @@ -687,6 +687,10 @@ int msm_csiphy_subdev_init(struct camss *camss, if (csiphy->rate_set[i]) break; } + + csiphy->rate_set[i] = csiphy_match_clock_name(clock->name, "csiphy%d", k); + if (csiphy->rate_set[i]) + break; } } -- 2.41.0