Hi Andy, On Wed, Feb 14, 2024 at 03:45:16PM +0200, Andy Shevchenko wrote: > On Thu, Jul 23, 2020 at 03:33:54AM +0300, Serge Semin wrote: > > Some platforms can be designed in a way so the UART port reference clock > > might be asynchronously changed at some point. In Baikal-T1 SoC this may > > happen due to the reference clock being shared between two UART ports, on > > the Allwinner SoC the reference clock is derived from the CPU clock, so > > any CPU frequency change should get to be known/reflected by/in the UART > > controller as well. But it's not enough to just update the > > uart_port->uartclk field of the corresponding UART port, the 8250 > > controller reference clock divisor should be altered so to preserve > > current baud rate setting. All of these things is done in a coherent > > way by calling the serial8250_update_uartclk() method provided in this > > patch. Though note that it isn't supposed to be called from within the > > UART port callbacks because the locks using to the protect the UART port > > data are already taken in there. > > ... > > > +/* > > + * Note in order to avoid the tty port mutex deadlock don't use the next method > > + * within the uart port callbacks. Primarily it's supposed to be utilized to > > + * handle a sudden reference clock rate change. > > + */ > > +void serial8250_update_uartclk(struct uart_port *port, unsigned int uartclk) > > +{ > > + struct uart_8250_port *up = up_to_u8250p(port); > > + unsigned int baud, quot, frac = 0; > > + struct ktermios *termios; > > + unsigned long flags; > > + > > + mutex_lock(&port->state->port.mutex); > > + > > + if (port->uartclk == uartclk) > > + goto out_lock; > > + > > + port->uartclk = uartclk; > > + termios = &port->state->port.tty->termios; > > + > > + baud = serial8250_get_baud_rate(port, termios, NULL); > > + quot = serial8250_get_divisor(port, baud, &frac); > > + > > + serial8250_rpm_get(up); > > + spin_lock_irqsave(&port->lock, flags); > > + > > + uart_update_timeout(port, termios->c_cflag, baud); > > + > > + serial8250_set_divisor(port, baud, quot, frac); > > + serial_port_out(port, UART_LCR, up->lcr); > > + serial8250_out_MCR(up, UART_MCR_DTR | UART_MCR_RTS); > > + > > + spin_unlock_irqrestore(&port->lock, flags); > > + serial8250_rpm_put(up); > > + > > +out_lock: > > + mutex_unlock(&port->state->port.mutex); > > While looking for something else I have stumbled over this function. > My Q is, since it has some duplications with > serial8250_do_set_termios(), can we actually call the latter (or > derevative that can be called in both) in the above code instead of > duplicating some lines? > > if (port UART clock has to be updated) > call (unlocked version of) serial8250_do_set_termios() > > Serge, what do you think? What an old thread you've digged out.) Well, AFAIR I didn't create a common baud-rate/clock-update method because the baud-rate change was just a two stages action: 1. calculate divisor+quot couple based on the new clock, 2. update the divisor+quot (+ update the timeout). The first stage didn't need to have the IRQsafe lock being held and the runtime-PM being enabled, meanwhile the later one needed those. So unless the nested locking or try-lock-based pattern is implemented each stage required dedicated function introduced, which would have been an overkill for that. But even if I got to implement the try-lock-based solution with a single function containing both stages I still couldn't avoid having the serial8250_get_baud_rate() and serial8250_get_divisor() methods executed in the atomic context, which isn't required for them and which would needlessly pro-long the CPU executing with the IRQs disabled. As you well know it's better to speed up the atomic context execution as much as possible. Secondly I didn't know much about the tty/serial subsystem internals back then. So I was afraid to break some parts I didn't aware of if the baud-rate/ref-clock change code had some implicit dependencies from the surrounding code and vice-versa (like the LCR DLAB flag state). Finally frankly it didn't seem like that much worth bothering about. Basically AFAICS there were only four methods which invocation I would have needed to move to a separate function: serial8250_get_baud_rate(); serial8250_get_divisor(); // spin-lock uart_update_timeout(port, termios->c_cflag, baud); serial8250_set_divisor(port, baud, quot, frac); // spin-unlock So I decided to take a simplest and safest path, and created a dedicated method for the just the ref-clock updates case leaving the baud-rate change task implemented in the framework of the standard serial8250_do_set_termios() method. Regarding doing vise-versa and calling the serial8250_do_set_termios() method from serial8250_update_uartclk() instead. To be honest I didn't consider that option. That might work though, but AFAICS the serial8250_do_set_termios() function will do much more than it's required in case if the ref-clock has changed. -Serge(y) > > > +} > > -- > With Best Regards, > Andy Shevchenko > >