Hi Stephen, On Wed, Jun 29, 2016 at 1:35 AM, Stephen Boyd <sboyd@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > On 06/23, Geert Uytterhoeven wrote: >> The following changes since commit e4e2d7c388350eba8b1dbc2569441ac9b545a8c4: >> >> clk: renesas: cpg-mssr: Add support for R-Car M3-W (2016-06-06 11:58:35 +0200) >> >> are available in the git repository at: >> >> git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/geert/renesas-drivers.git tags/clk-renesas-for-v4.8-tag2 >> >> for you to fetch changes up to e4c82863fd17bacb60080481c11eb0303d3f83d0: >> >> clk: renesas: r8a7795: Add THS/TSC clock (2016-06-21 09:21:06 +0200) >> >> ---------------------------------------------------------------- >> clk: renesas: Updates for v4.8 (take two) >> >> - Add support for R-Car V2H, >> - Add FDP1, DRIF, and thermal clocks on R-Car H3, >> - Correct a wrong parent clock. >> >> This pull request is based on my previous request "[git pull] clk: >> renesas: Add support for R-Car M3-W". >> For proper merge history (auto-grabbing the commit message from the >> signed tag), you should pull tags/clk-renesas-for-v4.8-tag1 first. >> As <dt-bindings/clock/r8a7796-cpg-mssr.h> is a hard dependency for the >> initial r8a7796.dtsi file, I would appreciate if you could do that >> sooner rather than later, so Simon can pull it as well, and start >> queueing up the DT files for R-Car M3-W, which need to go through >> arm-soc. > > Thanks. Pulled into clk-next. BTW, please don't use clk_readl() Thanks, but it seems something went wrong: commit d9cce3a8ebb871c5 is not a merge commit, but the combination of all 7 commits from the pull request? > unless you really need it. Just use readl/writel directly. I > should put a big fat warning over those functions that they > shouldn't be used. Hence all users under drivers/clk/renesas/ should be converted to readl()? Gr{oetje,eeting}s, Geert -- Geert Uytterhoeven -- There's lots of Linux beyond ia32 -- geert@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx In personal conversations with technical people, I call myself a hacker. But when I'm talking to journalists I just say "programmer" or something like that. -- Linus Torvalds