On 03/12/16 02:18, Tony Lindgren wrote:
* Michael Turquette <mturquette@xxxxxxxxxxxx> [161202 15:52]:
Quoting Tony Lindgren (2016-12-02 15:12:40)
* Michael Turquette <mturquette@xxxxxxxxxxxx> [161202 14:34]:
Quoting Tony Lindgren (2016-10-28 16:54:48)
* Stephen Boyd <sboyd@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx> [161028 16:37]:
On 10/28, Tony Lindgren wrote:
* Tero Kristo <t-kristo@xxxxxx> [161028 00:43]:
On 28/10/16 03:50, Stephen Boyd wrote:
I suppose a PRCM is
like an MFD that has clocks and resets under it? On other
platforms we've combined that all into one node and just had
#clock-cells and #reset-cells in that node. Is there any reason
we can't do that here?
For OMAPs, there are typically multiple instances of the PRCM around; OMAP4
for example has:
cm1 @ 0x4a004000 (clocks + clockdomains)
cm2 @ 0x4a008000 (clocks + clockdomains)
prm @ 0x4a306000 (few clocks + resets + power state handling)
scrm @ 0x4a30a000 (few external clocks + plenty of misc stuff)
These instances are also under different power/voltage domains which means
their PM behavior is different.
The idea behind having a clockdomain as a provider was mostly to have the
topology visible : prcm-instance -> clockdomain -> clocks
Yeah that's needed to get the interconnect hierarchy right for
genpd :)
... but basically I think it would be possible to drop the clockdomain
representation and just mark the prcm-instance as a clock provider. Tony,
any thoughts on that?
No let's not drop the clockdomains as those will be needed when we
move things into proper hierarchy within the interconnect instances.
This will then help with getting things right with genpd.
In the long run we just want to specify clockdomain and the offset of
the clock instance within the clockdomain in the dts files.
Sorry, I have very little idea how OMAP hardware works. Do you
mean that you will have different nodes for each clockdomain so
that genpd can map 1:1 to the node in dts? But in hardware
there's a prcm that allows us to control many clock domains
through register read/writes? How is the interconnect involved?
There are multiple clockdomains, at least one for each interconnect
instance. Once a clockdomain is idle, the related interconnect can
idle too. So yeah genpd pretty much maps 1:1 with the clockdomains.
There's more info in for example omap4 TRM section "3.4.1 Device
Power-Management Layout" that shows the voltage/power/clock domains.
The interconnect instances are mostly named there too looking at
the L4/L3 naming.
I'm confused on two points:
1) why are the clkdm's acting as clock providers? I've always hated the
name "clock domain" since those bits are for managing module state, not
clock state. The PRM, CM1 and CM2 provide the clocks, not the
clockdomains.
The clock domains have multiple clock inputs that are routed to multiple
child clocks. So it is a clock :)
See for example omap4430 TRM "3.6.4 CD_WKUP Clock Domain" on page
393 in my revision here.
On that page "Figure 3-48" shows CD_WKUP with the four input clocks.
And then "Table 3-84. CD_WKUP Control and Status Parameters" shows
the CD_WKUP clock domain specific registers. These registers show
the status, I think they are all read-only registers. Then CD_WKUP
has multiple child clocks with configurable registers.
From hardware register point of view, each clock domain has:
- Read-only clockdomain status registers in the beginning of
the address space
- Multiple similar clock instances register instances each
mapping to a specific interconnect target module
These are documented in "3.11.16.1 WKUP_CM Register Summary".
Oh, this is because you are treating the MODULEMODE bits like gate
clocks. I never really figured out if this was the best way to model
those bits since they do more than control a line toggling at a rate.
For instance this bit will affect the master/slave IDLE protocol between
the module and the PRCM.
Yes seems like there is some negotiation going on there with the
target module. But from practical point of view the CLKCTRL
register is the gate for a module functional clock.
There's some confusion on this, clockdomain is effectively a collection
of clocks, and can be used to force control that collection if needed.
Chapter "3.1.1.1.3 Clock Domain" in some OMAP4 TRM shows the
relationship neatly.
From hardware point of view, we ideally want to map interconnect
target modules to the clock instance offset from the clock domain
for that interconnect segment. For example gptimer1 clocks would
be just:
clocks = <&cd_wkup 0x40>;
2) why aren't the clock domains modeled as genpds with their associated
devices attached to them? Note that it is possible to "nest" genpd
objects. This would also allow for the "Clockdomain Dependency"
relationships to be properly modeled (see section 3.1.1.1.7 Clock Domain
Dependency in the OMAP4 TRM).
Clock domains only route clocks to child clocks. Power domains
are different registers. The power domains map roughly to
interconnect instances, there we have registers to disable the
whole interconnect when idle.
I'm not talking about power islands at all, but the genpd object in
Linux. For instance, if we treat each clock domain like a clock
provider, how could the functional dependency between clkdm_A and
clkdm_B be asserted?
To me it seems that some output of a clockdomain is just a input
of another clockdomain? So it's just the usual parent child
relationship once we treat a clockdomain just as a clock. Tero
probably has some input here.
A clockdomain should be modelled as a genpd, that I agree. However, it
doesn't prevent it from being a clock provider also, or does it?
There is certainly no API for that in the clock framework, but for genpd
your runtime_pm_get() callback for clkdm_A could call runtime_pm_get
against clkdm_B, which would satisfy the requirement. See section
3.1.1.1.7 Clock Domain Dependency in the OMAP4 TRM, version AB.
For static dependencies the apis genpd_add/remove_subdomain could
probably be used.
To me it seems the API is just clk_get() :) Do you have some
specific example we can use to check? My guess is that the
TRM "Clock Domain Dependency" is just the usual parent child
relationship between clocks that are the clockdomains..
If there is something more magical there certainly that should
be considered though.
The hwmods could be transformed to individual genpds also I guess. On DT
level though, we would still need a clock pointer to the main clock and
a genpd pointer in addition to that.
Tony, any thoughts on that? Would this break up the plans for the
interconnect completely?
-Tero
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