Re: [PATCH v3 6/7] phy: qcom-qmp-pcie: add support for ipq9574 gen3x2 PHY

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Hi Dmitry,

On 4/15/24 16:25, mr.nuke.me@xxxxxxxxx wrote:


On 4/15/24 15:10, Dmitry Baryshkov wrote:
On Mon, 15 Apr 2024 at 21:23, Alexandru Gagniuc <mr.nuke.me@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:

Add support for the gen3x2 PCIe PHY on IPQ9574, ported form downstream
5.4 kernel. Only the serdes and pcs_misc tables are new, the others
being reused from IPQ8074 and IPQ6018 PHYs.

Signed-off-by: Alexandru Gagniuc <mr.nuke.me@xxxxxxxxx>
---
  drivers/phy/qualcomm/phy-qcom-qmp-pcie.c      | 136 +++++++++++++++++-
  .../phy/qualcomm/phy-qcom-qmp-pcs-pcie-v5.h   |  14 ++
  2 files changed, 149 insertions(+), 1 deletion(-)


[skipped]

@@ -2448,7 +2542,7 @@ static inline void qphy_clrbits(void __iomem *base, u32 offset, u32 val)

  /* list of clocks required by phy */
  static const char * const qmp_pciephy_clk_l[] = {
-       "aux", "cfg_ahb", "ref", "refgen", "rchng", "phy_aux",
+       "aux", "cfg_ahb", "ref", "refgen", "rchng", "phy_aux", "anoc", "snoc"

Are the NoC clocks really necessary to drive the PHY? I think they are
usually connected to the controllers, not the PHYs.

The system will hang if these clocks are not enabled. They are also attached to the PHY in the QCA 5.4 downstream kernel.

They are named "anoc_lane", and "snoc_lane" in the downstream kernel. Would you like me to use these names instead?

e>>>   };

  /* list of regulators */
@@ -2499,6 +2593,16 @@ static const struct qmp_pcie_offsets qmp_pcie_offsets_v4x1 = {
         .rx             = 0x0400,
  };

+static const struct qmp_pcie_offsets qmp_pcie_offsets_ipq9574 = {
+       .serdes         = 0,
+       .pcs            = 0x1000,
+       .pcs_misc       = 0x1400,
+       .tx             = 0x0200,
+       .rx             = 0x0400,
+       .tx2            = 0x0600,
+       .rx2            = 0x0800,
+};
+
  static const struct qmp_pcie_offsets qmp_pcie_offsets_v4x2 = {
         .serdes         = 0,
         .pcs            = 0x0a00,
@@ -2728,6 +2832,33 @@ static const struct qmp_phy_cfg sm8250_qmp_gen3x1_pciephy_cfg = {
         .phy_status             = PHYSTATUS,
  };

+static const struct qmp_phy_cfg ipq9574_pciephy_gen3x2_cfg = {
+       .lanes                  = 2,
+
+       .offsets                = &qmp_pcie_offsets_ipq9574,
+
+       .tbls = {
+               .serdes         = ipq9574_gen3x2_pcie_serdes_tbl,
+               .serdes_num     = ARRAY_SIZE(ipq9574_gen3x2_pcie_serdes_tbl),
+               .tx             = ipq8074_pcie_gen3_tx_tbl,
+               .tx_num         = ARRAY_SIZE(ipq8074_pcie_gen3_tx_tbl),
+               .rx             = ipq6018_pcie_rx_tbl,
+               .rx_num         = ARRAY_SIZE(ipq6018_pcie_rx_tbl),
+               .pcs            = ipq6018_pcie_pcs_tbl,
+               .pcs_num        = ARRAY_SIZE(ipq6018_pcie_pcs_tbl),
+               .pcs_misc       = ipq9574_gen3x2_pcie_pcs_misc_tbl,
+               .pcs_misc_num   = ARRAY_SIZE(ipq9574_gen3x2_pcie_pcs_misc_tbl),
+       },
+       .reset_list             = ipq8074_pciephy_reset_l,
+       .num_resets             = ARRAY_SIZE(ipq8074_pciephy_reset_l),
+       .vreg_list              = NULL,
+       .num_vregs              = 0,
+       .regs                   = pciephy_v4_regs_layout,

So, is it v4 or v5?

Please give me a day or so to go over my notes and give you a more coherent explanation of why this versioning was chosen. I am only working from the QCA 5.4 downstream sources. I don't have any documentation for the silicon

The downstream QCA kernel uses the same table for ipq6018, ipq8074-gen3, and ipq9574. It is named "ipq_pciephy_gen3_regs_layout". Thus, it made sense to use the same upstream table for ipq9574, "pciephy_v4_regs_layout".

As far as the register tables go, the pcs/pcs_misc are squashed into the same table in the downstream 5.4 kernel. I was able to separate the two tables because the pcs_misc registers were defined with an offset of 0x400. For example:

/* QMP V2 PHY for PCIE gen3 2 Lane ports - PCS Misc registers */
#define PCS_PCIE_X2_POWER_STATE_CONFIG2                    0x40c
#define PCS_PCIE_X2_POWER_STATE_CONFIG4                    0x414
#define PCS_PCIE_X2_ENDPOINT_REFCLK_DRIVE                  0x420
#define PCS_PCIE_X2_L1P1_WAKEUP_DLY_TIME_AUXCLK_L          0x444
#define PCS_PCIE_X2_L1P1_WAKEUP_DLY_TIME_AUXCLK_H          0x448
#define PCS_PCIE_X2_L1P2_WAKEUP_DLY_TIME_AUXCLK_L          0x44c
#define PCS_PCIE_X2_L1P2_WAKEUP_DLY_TIME_AUXCLK_H          0x450
...

Here, QPHY_V4_PCS_PCIE_POWER_STATE_CONFIG2 = 0xc would be correct, assuming a pcs_misc offset of 0x400. However, starting with ENDPOINT_REFCLK_DRIVE, the register would be QPHY_V4_PCS_PCIE_ENDPOINT_REFCLK_DRIVE = 0x1c. Our offsets are off-by 0x4.

The existing V5 offsets, on the other hand, were all correct. For this reason, I considered that V5 is the most likely place to add the missing PCS misc definitions.

Is this explanation sufficiently convincing? Where does the v4/v5 scheme in upstream kernel originate?

Alex





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