Am Mon, 11 Nov 2024 17:09:53 +0200 schrieb Tony Lindgren <tony@xxxxxxxxxxx>: > * Andreas Kemnade <andreas@xxxxxxxxxxxx> [241108 17:41]: > > They are not used, if they are just disabled, kernel does not touch > > them, so if it is there, the kernel can handle > > pm. At least as long as it is not under ti,sysc. > > > > There are probably cleaner solutions for this, but for a CC: stable I > > would prefer something less invasive. > > For unused devices, it's best to configure things to use ti-sysc, and > then set status disabled (or reserved) for the child devices only. This > way the parent interconnect target module is PM runtime managed by > Linux, and it's power domain gets properly idled for the unused devices > too. > Hmm, we also have omap_hwmod_setup_all() which is still called if without device nodes being available. Converting mcspi to ti-sysc is more than 100 lines. So it does not qualify for stable. > > I can try a ti-sysc based fix in parallel. > > Yeah that should be trivial hopefully :) > I played around, got pm issues too, tried to force-enable things (via power/control), watched CM_IDLEST1_CORE and CM_FCLKEN1_CORE, they behave. Bits are set or reset. but not CM_IDLEST_CKGEN, it is 0x209 instead of 0x1. I test from initramfs, so no mmc activity involved removing status = "disabled" from mcspi3 solves things. With and without ti-sysc conversion. removing status = "disabled" from mcspi4 seems not to help. That all cannot be... I will retry tomorrow. Regards, Andreas