On Wed, Jul 16, 2014 at 05:22:03PM +0200, Arnd Bergmann wrote: > On Wednesday 16 July 2014 17:14:29 Thierry Reding wrote: > > > > > > Ok, I'll have a look. I think when this becomes a separate driver, it > > > should also have its own header file, so maybe you can in the meantime > > > make it a local header file in mach-tegra until we have found a good > > > place for it. > > > > Why do you think it should be a separate header? We already have a > > couple in include/linux and I'm not sure it's useful to add even more. > > If anything I would've thought it made sense to move the content of the > > other headers into tegra-soc.h. > > I very much dislike the idea of having a per-vendor header file that > everything gets crammed into. We should try to have proper subsystems > and generic interfaces for these wherever possible. I completely agree. However spreading the SoC-specific functions across multiple header files isn't going to help. If we keep all the per-vendor APIs in one file it makes it easier to see what could still be moved off into a separate subsystem. Now for PMC specifically, we've investigated converting the powergate API to power domains. I don't think it will be possible to make that work. The issue is that there's a defined sequence that needs to be respected to make sure the device is powered up properly. That sequence involves the primary clock and reset of the device. It's been proposed to make these clocks available to the PMC driver so that it can control them, but then we can't make sure that clocks are really off if they need to be, since we have two drivers accessing them. The only way I see to make that work reliably is by moving complete control of the powergate into drivers so that they can make sure clocks and resets are in the correct states. The PMC driver also provides access to I/O rails and specifically a deep power down state. Some modules are in deep power down state by default, so they need to be brought out of that state. I suppose this would be easier to turn into a generic framework because there aren't any cross- dependencies like for powergates, but I'm not aware of any other SoC having a similar feature (or implementation thereof in the kernel). And adding a subsystem just for the sake of it if only one implementation is available isn't a good idea in my opinion because it will be naturally designed to work best (and therefore maybe only) for the one instance. This issue is a fundamental one and there are bound to be other SoCs that have similarly unique blocks for which it's impractical to add a framework. I suspect the primary reason why we haven't run into it this frequently is because a lot of it is still hidden in arch/arm/mach-*. I'm open to suggestions of course, but the best option I currently see is to collect these custom APIs in a central place so that we can easily compare various SoCs for commonalities as time goes by and factor them out into subsystems where appropriate. For the same reason I think it's valid to put this type of code into drivers/soc. That way we have one subdirectory to look through for potential unification rather than various ones sprinkled across arch directories. It makes little sense in my opinion to move this code to drivers/power if there's no common framework anyway. Thierry
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