On 31.08.2024 08:13, Biju Das wrote: > Hi Claudiu, > >> -----Original Message----- >> From: claudiu beznea <claudiu.beznea@xxxxxxxxx> >> Sent: Friday, August 30, 2024 9:23 AM >> Subject: Re: [PATCH 00/16] Add initial USB support for the Renesas RZ/G3S SoC >> >> Hi, Ulf, >> >> On 29.08.2024 18:26, Ulf Hansson wrote: >>> On Thu, 22 Aug 2024 at 17:28, Claudiu <claudiu.beznea@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: >>>> >>>> From: Claudiu Beznea <claudiu.beznea.uj@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx> >>>> >>>> Hi, >>>> >>>> Series adds initial USB support for the Renesas RZ/G3S SoC. >>>> >>>> Series is split as follows: >>>> >>>> - patch 01/16 - add clock reset and power domain support for USB >>>> - patch 02-04/16 - add reset control support for a USB signal >>>> that need to be controlled before/after >>>> the power to USB area is turned on/off. >>>> >>>> Philipp, Ulf, Geert, all, >>>> >>>> I detailed my approach for this in patch >>>> 04/16, please have a look and let me know >>>> your input. >>> >>> I have looked briefly. Your suggested approach may work, but I have a >>> few thoughts, see below. >>> >>> If I understand correctly, it is the consumer driver for the device >>> that is attached to the USB power domain that becomes responsible for >>> asserting/de-asserting this new signal. Right? >> >> Right! >> >>> >>> In this regard, please note that the consumer driver doesn't really >>> know when the power domain really gets powered-on/off. Calling >>> pm_runtime_get|put*() is dealing with the reference counting. For >>> example, a call to pm_runtime_get*() just makes sure that the PM >>> domain gets-or-remains powered-on. Could this be a problem from the >>> reset-signal point of view? >> >> It should be safe. From the HW manual I understand the hardware block is something like the following: >> >> >> USB area >> +-------------------------+ >> | | >> | PHY --->USB controller | >> SYSC --> | ^ | >> | | | >> | PHY reset | >> +-------------------------+ > > How USB PWRRDY signal is connected to USB? HW manual mentions this in the chapter describing the SYS_USB_PWRRDY register: Controls PWRRDY terminal of USB 0: PWRRDY 1: PWRRDY down When turning off the *USB region* power, set this bit to 1. When turning on the *USB region* power, set this bit to 0 By USB region I get the that it is related to the SoC area where resides all the USB IPs. I cannot tell more than what is in the hardware manual. > > USB block consists of PHY control, PHY, USB HOST and USB OTG Controller IPs. > > Is it connected to top level block or connected to each IP's for turning off the USB region power? I cannot tell more than it is in the hardware manual. > > ? Or Just PHY (HW manual mentions for AWO, the USB PWRRDY signal->USB PHY PWRRDY signal control)? > > If the USBPWRRDY signal is connected across modules with this reset signal approach > then you may need to update bindings [1] with that reset signal > > [1] https://patchwork.kernel.org/project/linux-renesas-soc/patch/20240822152801.602318-12-claudiu.beznea.uj@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx/ If that is true, then this signal may need to be routed to the PHY for better hardware description. > > > Cheers, > Biju > >> >> Where: >> - SYSC is the system controller that controls the new signal for which >> I'm requesting opinions in this series >> - PHY reset: is the block controlling the PHYs >> - PHY: is the block controlling the USB PHYs >> - USB controller: is the USB controller >> >> Currently, I passed the SYSC signal handling to the PHY reset driver; w/o PHY reset the rest of the >> USB logic cannot work (neither PHY block nor USB controller). >> >> Currently, the PHY reset driver call pm_runtime_resume_and_get() in probe and pm_runtime_put() in >> remove. The struct reset_control_ops::{assert, deassert} only set specific bits in registers (no >> pm_runtime* calls). >> >> The PHY driver is taking its PHY reset in probe and release it in remove(). >> With this approach the newly introduced SYSC signal will be de-asserted/asserted only in the PHY reset >> probe/remove (either if it is handled though PM domain or reset control signal). >> >> If the SYSC signal would be passed to all the blocks in the USB area (and it would be handled though >> PM domains) it should be no problem either, AFAICT, because of reference counting the >> pm_runtime_get|put*() is taking care of. As the PHY reset is the root node the in the devices node >> tree for USB the reference counting should work, too (I may miss something though, please correct me >> if I'm wrong). >> >> If the SYSC signal would be handled though a reset control driver (as proposed in this series) and we >> want to pass this reference to all the blocks in the USB area then we can request the reset signal as >> shared and, AFAIK, this is also reference counted. The devices node tree should help with the order, >> too, if I'm not wrong. >> >> Thank you for looking at this, >> Claudiu Beznea >> >>> >>> [...] >>> >>> Kind regards >>> Uffe