On Tue, 30 Jun 2015, Paul Osmialowski wrote: > +static struct kinetis_clock_event_ddata > + kinetis_clockevent_tmrs[KINETIS_PIT_CHANNELS] = { > + { > + .evtdev = { > + .name = "kinetis-clockevent0", > + .rating = 200, > + .features = > + CLOCK_EVT_FEAT_PERIODIC | CLOCK_EVT_FEAT_ONESHOT, > + .set_next_event = kinetis_clockevent_tmr_set_next_event, > + .set_state_periodic = > + kinetis_clockevent_tmr_set_state_periodic, > + .set_state_oneshot = > + kinetis_clockevent_tmr_set_state_oneshot, > + .set_state_oneshot_stopped = > + kinetis_clockevent_tmr_set_state_oneshot, > + .set_state_shutdown = > + kinetis_clockevent_tmr_set_state_oneshot, > + }, > + }, > + { > + .evtdev = { > + .name = "kinetis-clockevent1", > + }, So how is that supposed to work if timer 1,2 or 3 is selected from device tree? The function pointers are not initialized. You really do not need that array at all. You can simply set the name at init time. > + clockevents_register_device( > + &kinetis_clockevent_tmrs[chan].evtdev); > + > + kinetis_pit_init(&kinetis_clockevent_tmrs[chan], > + (rate / HZ) - 1); > + kinetis_pit_enable(&kinetis_clockevent_tmrs[chan], 1); No point doing this. The core code has invoked the set_periodic call back via clockevents_register_device() already. Thanks, tglx -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-serial" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html