On 18-08-21, 07:12, Dmitry Osipenko wrote: > 18.08.2021 06:55, Viresh Kumar пишет: > > On 17-08-21, 18:49, Dmitry Osipenko wrote: > >> 17.08.2021 10:55, Viresh Kumar пишет: > >> ... > >>>> +int dev_pm_opp_sync(struct device *dev) > >>>> +{ > >>>> + struct opp_table *opp_table; > >>>> + struct dev_pm_opp *opp; > >>>> + int ret = 0; > >>>> + > >>>> + /* Device may not have OPP table */ > >>>> + opp_table = _find_opp_table(dev); > >>>> + if (IS_ERR(opp_table)) > >>>> + return 0; > >>>> + > >>>> + if (!_get_opp_count(opp_table)) > >>>> + goto put_table; > >>>> + > >>>> + opp = _find_current_opp(dev, opp_table); > >>>> + ret = _set_opp(dev, opp_table, opp, opp->rate); > >>> > >>> And I am not sure how this will end up working, since new OPP will be > >>> equal to old one. Since I see you call this from resume() at many > >>> places. > >> > >> Initially OPP table is "uninitialized" and opp_table->enabled=false, > >> hence the first sync always works even if OPP is equal to old one. Once > >> OPP has been synced, all further syncs are NO-OPs, hence it doesn't > >> matter how many times syncing is called. > >> > >> https://elixir.bootlin.com/linux/v5.14-rc6/source/drivers/opp/core.c#L1012 > > > > Right, but how will this work from Resume ? Won't that be a no-op ? > > The first resume initializes the OPP state on sync, all further syncs on > resume are no-ops. But the OPPs should already be initialized as someone must have called opp-set-rate earlier ? Why do this from resume and not probe ? -- viresh