Re: [PATCH 4/4] drm: rcar-du: Use product register framework

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Hi Dirk,

On Fri, May 27, 2016 at 5:16 PM, Dirk Behme <dirk.behme@xxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
> Hi Magnus,
>
>
> On 27.05.2016 05:40, Magnus Damm wrote:
>>
>> Hi Dirk,
>>
>> On Wed, May 25, 2016 at 5:58 PM, Dirk Behme <dirk.behme@xxxxxxxxxxxx>
>> wrote:
>>>
>>> Instead of hard coding the product register in the rcar-du, use
>>> the framework for it to get the SoC version and the revision needed
>>> for the enabling the workaround.
>>>
>>> Signed-off-by: Dirk Behme <dirk.behme@xxxxxxxxxxxx>
>>> ---
>>>  drivers/gpu/drm/rcar-du/rcar_du_crtc.c | 13 ++-----------
>>>  1 file changed, 2 insertions(+), 11 deletions(-)
>>>
>>> diff --git a/drivers/gpu/drm/rcar-du/rcar_du_crtc.c
>>> b/drivers/gpu/drm/rcar-du/rcar_du_crtc.c
>>> index e10943b..ee639a6 100644
>>> --- a/drivers/gpu/drm/rcar-du/rcar_du_crtc.c
>>> +++ b/drivers/gpu/drm/rcar-du/rcar_du_crtc.c
>>> @@ -13,6 +13,7 @@
>>>
>>>  #include <linux/clk.h>
>>>  #include <linux/mutex.h>
>>> +#include <linux/soc/renesas/rcar3-prr.h>
>>>
>>>  #include <drm/drmP.h>
>>>  #include <drm/drm_atomic.h>
>>> @@ -30,12 +31,6 @@
>>>  #include "rcar_du_regs.h"
>>>  #include "rcar_du_vsp.h"
>>>
>>> -#define PRODUCT_REG    0xfff00044
>>> -#define PRODUCT_H3_BIT (0x4f << 8)
>>> -#define PRODUCT_MASK   (0x7f << 8)
>>> -#define CUT_ES1                (0x00)
>>> -#define CUT_ES1_MASK   (0x000000ff)
>>> -
>>>  static u32 rcar_du_crtc_read(struct rcar_du_crtc *rcrtc, u32 reg)
>>>  {
>>>         struct rcar_du_device *rcdu = rcrtc->group->dev;
>>> @@ -167,7 +162,6 @@ static void rcar_du_crtc_set_display_timing(struct
>>> rcar_du_crtc *rcrtc)
>>>         u32 div;
>>>         u32 dpll_reg = 0;
>>>         struct dpll_info *dpll;
>>> -       void __iomem *product_reg;
>>>         bool h3_es1_workaround = false;
>>>
>>>         dpll = kzalloc(sizeof(*dpll), GFP_KERNEL);
>>> @@ -175,11 +169,8 @@ static void rcar_du_crtc_set_display_timing(struct
>>> rcar_du_crtc *rcrtc)
>>>                 return;
>>>
>>>         /* DU2 DPLL Clock Select bit workaround in R-Car H3(ES1.0) */
>>> -       product_reg = ioremap(PRODUCT_REG, 0x04);
>>> -       if (((readl(product_reg) & PRODUCT_MASK) == PRODUCT_H3_BIT)
>>> -               && ((readl(product_reg) & CUT_ES1_MASK) == CUT_ES1))
>>> +       if (cpu_is_rcar3_h3() && revision_is_rcar3_es1())
>>>                 h3_es1_workaround = true;
>>> -       iounmap(product_reg);
>>
>>
>> Thanks for your efforts!
>>
>> I agree that doing ioremap() with a hard coded address and reading out
>> an unrelated register looks like a short term workaround. Replacing
>> that with something cleaner makes sense. The question in my mind is
>> how to make it cleaner.
>>
>> I can see that in this series you have introduced some specialized
>> functions to be able to check ES version. This may be slightly
>> cleaner, but the design comes with some drawbacks. One major drawback
>> is that specialized functions makes it difficult to move the code
>> between several architectures. So if we should clean up the code then
>> we should go all the way and do it in a reusable way.
>>
>> Over the years many drivers have been initially written on the SH
>> arch, then moved to 32-bit ARM and recently also be used for ARM v8.
>> Not sure about the DU driver, it may only be shared between 32-bit ARM
>> and 64-bit ARM instead of all 3 architectures. I think the SCIF driver
>> has been used on even more architectures like H8. One major reason why
>> we have been able to reuse code over several architectures is that
>> we've focus on using standard functions and stayed away from
>> architecture-specific extensions. In case a short term workaround is
>> needed then it should not break the code on other architectures. The
>> initial short term code above would work on any of the supported SoCs
>> and it would also compile on a whole bunch of other architectures for
>> compile testing purpose.
>
>
>
> Please correct me if I'm wrong, but the initial short term code does work on
> all SoCs having a PRODUCT_REG @ 0xfff00044. Correct?
>
> And my code should work identically, no?
>
> Or where do you see the difference?
>
> Going even one step further, running the initial short term code on SoCs
> *not* having a PRODUCT_REG @ 0xfff00044 will fail randomly, depending on the
> result read from that address, then.
>
> Instead, my proposal, will give at least a valid error message (assuming the
> device tree entries are set correctly).

Your code is an improvement to the original one for sure, and I think
it should work identically but with better error reporting...

> Regarding compilation, you are correct. Most probably I should add some
> empty stub functions for the cpu_is_xx() and revision_is_xx() functions used
> on unsupported platforms in a v2.

.. however adding a specialized API like this seems like the wrong
direction IMO. As you probably know, the hardware IP included in SoCs
come from various vendors with potentially shared device drivers.
Think USB host controller drivers or serial ports for instance. With
your approach you would potentially force shared drivers to include
<linux/soc/renesas/rcar3-prr.h> and similar per-SoC-vendor includes
just to be able to check version of a specific IP. This does not scale
very well IMO.

Because of this I prefer to go with some kind of shared standard API
instead of per-vendor solutions.

>> Anyway, please use something standard that can be used on several
>> architectures without causing breakage. You should also discuss this
>> with the initial author of the DU driver. He may have a different
>> opinion than me, but I'm sure he agrees on that the driver should keep
>> on working on several architectures.
>
> I agree here and I'm happy do discuss this. I tried this with adding Koji
> Matsuoka into all discussions CC. Do you like to propose anybody else?

I suspect Matsuoka-san wrote this code with the BSP target in mind.
Then this was broken out into a series when trying to enable HDMI
support on top of mainline. Like Geert wrote in his email, the code
seems a bit immature at this point. So simply dropping the HDMI series
for now makes sense to me.

Thanks,

/ magnus



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