On Wed, Dec 27, 2017 at 4:20 AM, Sricharan R <sricharan@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > Hi Rob, > > On 12/26/2017 11:06 PM, Rob Herring wrote: >> On Thu, Dec 21, 2017 at 5:53 AM, Sricharan R <sricharan@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: >>> Hi Rob, >>> >>> On 12/21/2017 2:48 AM, Rob Herring wrote: >>>> On Wed, Dec 20, 2017 at 11:55:33AM +0530, Sricharan R wrote: >>>>> Hi Viresh, >>>>> >>>>> On 12/20/2017 8:56 AM, Viresh Kumar wrote: >>>>>> On 19-12-17, 21:25, Sricharan R wrote: >>>>>>> + cpu@0 { >>>>>>> + compatible = "qcom,krait"; >>>>>>> + enable-method = "qcom,kpss-acc-v1"; >>>>>>> + device_type = "cpu"; >>>>>>> + reg = <0>; >>>>>>> + qcom,acc = <&acc0>; >>>>>>> + qcom,saw = <&saw0>; >>>>>>> + clocks = <&kraitcc 0>; >>>>>>> + clock-names = "cpu"; >>>>>>> + cpu-supply = <&smb208_s2a>; >>>>>>> + operating-points-v2 = <&cpu_opp_table>; >>>>>>> + }; >>>>>>> + >>>>>>> + qcom,pvs { >>>>>>> + qcom,pvs-format-a; >>>>>>> + }; >>>>>> >>>>>> Not sure what Rob is going to say on that :) >>>>>> >>>>> >>>>> Yes. Would be good to know the best way. >>>> >>>> Seems like this should be a property of an efuse node either implied by >>>> the compatible or a separate property. What determines format A vs. B? >>>> >>> >>> Yes, this efuse registers are part of the eeprom (qfprom) tied to the soc. >>> So this property (details like bitfields and register offsets that it represents) >>> can be put soc specific and nvmem apis can be used to read >>> the registers. Does something like below look ok ? >>> >>> qcom,pvs { >>> compatible = "qcom,pvs-ipq8064"; >>> nvmem-cells = <&pvs_efuse>; >>> } >> >> Why do you need this node? It doesn't look like it corresponds to a >> h/w block. It looks like you are just creating it to instantiate a >> driver. >> >>> qfprom: qfprom@700000 { >>> compatible = "qcom,qfprom"; >> >> Either this or... >> >>> reg = <0x00700000 0x1000>; >>> #address-cells = <1>; >>> #size-cells = <1>; >>> ranges; >>> pvs_efuse: pvs { >> >> a compatible here should be specific enough so the OS can know what >> the bits are. > > Infact the above "qcom,pvs" node is required mainly to act as a consumer > for the nvmem data provider ("qcom,qfprom") (using nvmem-cells = <&pvs_efuse>) > Then "qfprom" can be made to contain a "format_a" or "format_b" specific cell. > > So all that is needed is, nvmem-cells = <&pvs_efuse_phandle> needs to be available > somewhere. The requirement is similar what is now done by "operating-points-v2-ti-cpu" > and the ti-cpufreq.c. There "operating-points-v2-ti-cpu" node, contains the syscon > register to read the efuse values. Similarly does defining a new > "operating-points-v2-krait-cpu" which would contain the nvmem-cells property look ok ? > This would avoid defining a new qcom,pvs node. Yes, this seems reasonable. > > cpu@0 { > compatible = "qcom,krait"; > enable-method = "qcom,kpss-acc-v1"; > device_type = "cpu"; > reg = <0>; > qcom,acc = <&acc0>; > qcom,saw = <&saw0>; > clocks = <&kraitcc 0>; > clock-names = "cpu"; > cpu-supply = <&smb208_s2a>; > operating-points-v2 = <&cpu_opp_table>; > }; > > cpu_opp_table: opp_table { > compatible = "operating-points-v2-krait-cpu"; > > nvmem-cells = <&pvs_efuse_format_a>; > /* > * Missing opp-shared property means CPUs switch DVFS states > * independently. > */ > > opp-1400000000 { > opp-hz = /bits/ 64 <1400000000>; > opp-microvolt-speed0-pvs0-v0 = <1250000>; > opp-microvolt-speed0-pvs1-v0 = <1175000>; > opp-microvolt-speed0-pvs2-v0 = <1125000>; > opp-microvolt-speed0-pvs3-v0 = <1050000>; > > }; > ... > } > > qfprom: qfprom@700000 { > compatible = "qcom,qfprom"; > reg = <0x00700000 0x1000>; > #address-cells = <1>; > #size-cells = <1>; > ranges; > pvs_efuse_format_a: pvs { > reg = <0xc0 0x8>; > }; > } > > Regards, > Sricharan > > -- > "QUALCOMM INDIA, on behalf of Qualcomm Innovation Center, Inc. is a member of Code Aurora Forum, hosted by The Linux Foundation -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-soc" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html