On Thu, Jul 17, 2014 at 06:38:56PM +0200, Tomasz Figa wrote: > Certain implementations of secure hypervisors (namely the one found on > Samsung Exynos-based boards) do not provide access to individual L2C > registers. This makes the .write_sec()-based interface insufficient and > provoking ugly hacks. > > This patch is first step to make the driver not rely on availability of > writes to individual registers. This is achieved by refactoring the > driver to use a commit-like operation scheme: all register values are > prepared first and stored in an instance of l2x0_regs struct and then a > single callback is responsible to flush those values to the hardware. This isn't going to work very well... > +static const struct l2c_init_data *l2x0_data; So you keep a pointer to the init data... > +static void l2c_resume(void) > +{ > + l2x0_data->enable(l2x0_base, l2x0_saved_regs.aux_ctrl, > + l2x0_data->num_lock); which you dereference at resume time... > static const struct l2c_init_data l2c210_data __initconst = { but the structures which get assigned to the pointer are marked __initconst. That's not going to work very well. -- FTTC broadband for 0.8mile line: currently at 9.5Mbps down 400kbps up according to speedtest.net. -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-samsung-soc" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html