On Thu 28 Oct 03:46 PDT 2021, Rajendra Nayak wrote: > > On 10/28/2021 4:05 PM, Ulf Hansson wrote: > > [...] > > > > > > > > Got it. So in this case we could have the various display components > > > > > > that are in the mdss gdsc domain set their frequency via OPP and then > > > > > > have that translate to a level in CX or MMCX. How do we parent the power > > > > > > domains outside of DT? I'm thinking that we'll need to do that if MMCX > > > > > > is parented by CX or something like that and the drivers for those two > > > > > > power domains are different. Is it basic string matching? > > > > > > > > > > In one way or another we need to invoke pm_genpd_add_subdomain() to link > > > > > the two power-domains (actually genpds) together, like what was done in > > > > > 3652265514f5 ("clk: qcom: gdsc: enable optional power domain support"). > > > > > > > > > > In the case of MMCX and CX, my impression of the documentation is that > > > > > they are independent - but if we need to express that CX is parent of > > > > > MMCX, they are both provided by rpmhpd which already supports this by > > > > > just specifying .parent on mmcx to point to cx. > > > > > > > > I was trying to follow the discussion, but it turned out to be a bit > > > > complicated to catch up and answer all things. In any case, let me > > > > just add a few overall comments, perhaps that can help to move things > > > > forward. > > > > > > > > First, one domain can have two parent domains. Both from DT and from > > > > genpd point of view, just to make this clear. > > > > > > > > Although, it certainly looks questionable to me, to hook up the USB > > > > device to two separate power domains, one to control power and one to > > > > control performance. Especially, if it's really the same piece of HW > > > > that is managing both things. > > > [].. > > > > Additionally, if it's correct to model > > > > the USB GDSC power domain as a child to the CX power domain from HW > > > > point of view, we should likely do that. > > > > > > I think this would still require a few things in genpd, since > > > CX and USB GDSC are power domains from different providers. > > > Perhaps a pm_genpd_add_subdomain_by_name()? > > > > > > > I think of_genpd_add_subdomain() should help to address this. No? > > We only describe the provider nodes in DT and not the individual power domains. > For instance GCC is the power domain provider which is in DT, and USB GDSC is one > of the many power domains it supports, similarly RPMHPD is the provider node in > DT and CX is one of the many power domains it supports. > So we would need some non-DT way of hooking up power domains from two different > providers as parent/child. > See 266e5cf39a0f ("arm64: dts: qcom: sm8250: remove mmcx regulator") and 3652265514f5 ("clk: qcom: gdsc: enable optional power domain support") MMCX is declared as power-domain for the dispcc (which is correct in itself) and the gdsc code will register GDSCs as subdomains of the same power-domain. To ensure this code path is invoked the clock driver itself needed this 6158b94ec807 ("clk: qcom: dispcc-sm8250: use runtime PM for the clock controller") So at least in theory, considering only USB the minimum would be to pm_runtime_enable() gcc-7280 and add power-domains = <CX> to the gcc node. The "problem" I described would be if there are GDSCs that are subdomains of MX - which I've seen hinted in some documentation. If so we should to specify both CX and MX as power-domains for &gcc and the gdsc implementation needs to be extended to allow us to select between the two. For this I believe a combination of genpd_dev_pm_attach_by_name() and of_genpd_add_subdomain() would do the trick. That is, if there actually are GDSCs exposed by gcc that are not subdomains of CX - otherwise none of this is needed. Regards, Bjorn