On 06/18/2014 12:16 AM, Andrew Bresticker wrote: > Add support for the on-chip XHCI host controller present on Tegra SoCs. > > The driver is currently very basic: it loads the controller with its > firmware, starts the controller, and is able to service messages sent > by the controller's firmware. The hardware supports device mode as > well as runtime power-gating, but support for these is not yet > implemented here. > > Based on work by: > Ajay Gupta <ajayg@xxxxxxxxxx> > Bharath Yadav <byadav@xxxxxxxxxx> > diff --git a/drivers/usb/host/Kconfig b/drivers/usb/host/Kconfig > +config USB_XHCI_TEGRA > + tristate "NVIDIA Tegra XHCI support" > + depends on ARCH_TEGRA > + select PINCTRL_TEGRA_XUSB > + select TEGRA_XUSB_MBOX > + select FW_LOADER I think at least some of those should be depends. In particular, the mbox driver patch said: +config TEGRA_XUSB_MBOX + bool "NVIDIA Tegra XUSB mailbox support" which means the option is user-selectable. Either MBOX should be invisible and selected here, or it should be visible with USB_XHCI_TEGRA depending on it. > diff --git a/drivers/usb/host/xhci-tegra.c b/drivers/usb/host/xhci-tegra.c > +#define TEGRA_XHCI_UTMI_PHYS 3 > +#define TEGRA_XHCI_HSIC_PHYS 2 > +#define TEGRA_XHCI_USB3_PHYS 2 > +#define TEGRA_XHCI_MAX_PHYS (TEGRA_XHCI_UTMI_PHYS + TEGRA_XHCI_HSIC_PHYS + \ > + TEGRA_XHCI_USB3_PHYS) Do those numbers need to be synchronized with the XUSB padctrl driver at all? > +static u32 csb_readl(struct tegra_xhci_hcd *tegra, u32 addr) > +{ > + u32 page, offset; > + > + page = CSB_PAGE_SELECT(addr); > + offset = CSB_PAGE_OFFSET(addr); > + fpci_writel(tegra, page, XUSB_CFG_ARU_C11_CSBRANGE); > + return fpci_readl(tegra, XUSB_CFG_CSB_BASE_ADDR + offset); > +} I assume some higher level has the required locking or single-threading so that the keyhole register accesses don't get interleaved? > +static void tegra_xhci_cfg(struct tegra_xhci_hcd *tegra) > +{ > + u32 reg; > + > + reg = ipfs_readl(tegra, IPFS_XUSB_HOST_CONFIGURATION_0); > + reg |= IPFS_EN_FPCI; > + ipfs_writel(tegra, reg, IPFS_XUSB_HOST_CONFIGURATION_0); > + udelay(10); > + > + /* Program Bar0 Space */ > + reg = fpci_readl(tegra, XUSB_CFG_4); > + reg |= tegra->hcd->rsrc_start; Don't you need to mask out the original value here? I guess whatever is being written is probably always the same, but it seems scary to assume that a bootloader, or previous version of a module during development, didn't write something unexpected there. Perhaps if the HW module's reset is pulsed we don't need to worry though. > +static int tegra_xhci_load_firmware(struct tegra_xhci_hcd *tegra) > +{ > + struct device *dev = tegra->dev; > + struct tegra_xhci_fw_cfgtbl *cfg_tbl; > + u64 fw_base; > + u32 val; > + time_t fw_time; > + struct tm fw_tm; > + > + if (csb_readl(tegra, XUSB_CSB_MP_ILOAD_BASE_LO) != 0) { > + dev_info(dev, "Firmware already loaded, Falcon state 0x%x\n", > + csb_readl(tegra, XUSB_FALC_CPUCTL)); > + return 0; > + } > + > + cfg_tbl = (struct tegra_xhci_fw_cfgtbl *)tegra->fw_data; Are there endianness or CPU word size (e.g. ARMv8) issues here; this is casting the content of a data file to a CPU data structure. > +static int tegra_xhci_set_ss_clk(struct tegra_xhci_hcd *tegra, > + unsigned long rate) > + switch (rate) { > + case TEGRA_XHCI_SS_CLK_HIGH_SPEED: > + /* Reparent to PLLU_480M. Set div first to avoid overclocking */ > + old_parent_rate = clk_get_rate(clk_get_parent(clk)); > + new_parent_rate = clk_get_rate(tegra->pll_u_480m); > + div = new_parent_rate / rate; > + ret = clk_set_rate(clk, old_parent_rate / div); > + if (ret) > + return ret; > + ret = clk_set_parent(clk, tegra->pll_u_480m); > + if (ret) > + return ret; Don't you need to call clk_set_rate() again after reparenting, since the divisor will be different, and the rounding too. > +static int tegra_xhci_regulator_enable(struct tegra_xhci_hcd *tegra) > +{ > + int ret; > + > + ret = regulator_enable(tegra->s3p3v_reg); > + if (ret < 0) > + return ret; > + ret = regulator_enable(tegra->s1p8v_reg); > + if (ret < 0) > + goto disable_s3p3v; > + ret = regulator_enable(tegra->s1p05v_reg); > + if (ret < 0) > + goto disable_s1p8v; Would regulator_bulk_enable() save any code here? Similar in _disable(). > +static const struct tegra_xhci_soc_config tegra124_soc_config = { > + .firmware_file = "tegra12x/tegra_xusb_firmware", > +}; I would prefer an "nvidia/" prefix so everything gets namespaced by vendor. "tegra12x" isn't the name of the chip, but rather "Tegra124". "tegra_" and "_firmware" seem redundant, since they're implied by parent directories. So, how about "nvidia/tegra124/xusb"? (perhaps with .img or .bin file extension) > +static int tegra_xhci_probe(struct platform_device *pdev) > + tegra->host_clk = devm_clk_get(&pdev->dev, "xusb_host"); > + if (IS_ERR(tegra->host_clk)) { > + ret = PTR_ERR(tegra->host_clk); > + goto put_hcd; > + } > + tegra->falc_clk = devm_clk_get(&pdev->dev, "xusb_falcon_src"); > + if (IS_ERR(tegra->falc_clk)) { > + ret = PTR_ERR(tegra->falc_clk); > + goto put_hcd; > + } ... Seems like devm_clk_get_bulk() would be useful:-) > + for (i = 0; i < TEGRA_XHCI_UTMI_PHYS; i++) { > + char prop[sizeof("utmi-N")]; > + > + sprintf(prop, "utmi-%d", i); Since this loop is cut/paste 3 times just with the string "utmi"/"hsic"/"usb3" being different, does it make sense to add an outer loop over an array of strings instead of duplicating the loo? > + ret = request_firmware_nowait(THIS_MODULE, true, > + tegra->soc_config->firmware_file, > + tegra->dev, GFP_KERNEL, tegra, > + tegra_xhci_probe_finish); I'm not familiar with that API. I assume the point is this works in allh the following situations: * Driver is built-in, probes before rootfs is available, firmware eventually gets loaded a few seconds after rootfs is available. * Driver is a module and gets loaded from an initrd, firmware is loaded from initrd essentially immediately. * Driver is a module and gets loaded from an initrd, firmware eventually gets loaded a few seconds after rootfs is available. * Driver is a module and gets loaded from rootfs, firmware is loaded from rootfs essentially immediately. -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-usb" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html