Hi, On 2022/4/29 上午12:44, Aidan MacDonald wrote:
I ran across a problem trying to get Linux running on an Ingenic X1000 SoC: since the memory clock isn't referenced by any driver, it appears unused and gets disabled automatically. After that, the system hangs on any RAM access. There is a hack in board-ingenic.c to forcibly enable the CPU clock, but this is insufficient for the X1000 since the memory clock has its own gate and mux that isn't tied to the CPU. This patch series fixes the bug by adding CLK_IS_CRITICAL flags to important clocks, which seems to be the approach used in many other SoC clock drivers. v2: Add comments to patch 02 to explain why we need CLK_IS_CRITICAL. Aidan MacDonald (3): clk: ingenic: Allow specifying common clock flags clk: ingenic: Mark critical clocks in Ingenic SoCs mips: ingenic: Do not manually reference the CPU clock arch/mips/generic/board-ingenic.c | 26 -------------------------- drivers/clk/ingenic/cgu.c | 2 +- drivers/clk/ingenic/cgu.h | 3 +++ drivers/clk/ingenic/jz4725b-cgu.c | 10 ++++++++++ drivers/clk/ingenic/jz4740-cgu.c | 10 ++++++++++ drivers/clk/ingenic/jz4760-cgu.c | 10 ++++++++++ drivers/clk/ingenic/jz4770-cgu.c | 5 +++++ drivers/clk/ingenic/jz4780-cgu.c | 15 +++++++++++++++ drivers/clk/ingenic/x1000-cgu.c | 15 +++++++++++++++ drivers/clk/ingenic/x1830-cgu.c | 11 +++++++++++ 10 files changed, 80 insertions(+), 27 deletions(-)
Tested-by: 周琰杰 (Zhou Yanjie) <zhouyanjie@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx> # On X1000 and X1830