Hello Dmitry, On Mon, 31 Oct 2022 03:34:07 +0300 Dmitry Osipenko <dmitry.osipenko@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > On 10/28/22 10:48, luca.ceresoli@xxxxxxxxxxx wrote: > > From: Luca Ceresoli <luca.ceresoli@xxxxxxxxxxx> > > > > On Tegra20 and Tegra30 the HOST1X clock is a fractional clock divider with > > 7 integer bits + 1 decimal bit. This has been verified on both > > documentation and real hardware for Tegra20 an on the documentation I was > > able to find for Tegra30. > > > > However in the kernel code this clock is declared as an integer divider. A > > consequence of this is that requesting 144 MHz for HOST1X which is fed by > > pll_p running at 216 MHz would result in 108 MHz (216 / 2) instead of 144 > > MHz (216 / 1.5). > > > > Fix by replacing the INT() macro with the MUX() macro which, despite the > > name, defines a fractional divider. The only difference between the two > > macros is the former does not have the TEGRA_DIVIDER_INT flag. > > > > Also move the line together with the other MUX*() ones to keep the existing > > file organization. > > > > Fixes: 76ebc134d45d ("clk: tegra: move periph clocks to common file") > > Cc: stable@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx > > Cc: Peter De Schrijver <pdeschrijver@xxxxxxxxxx> > > Signed-off-by: Luca Ceresoli <luca.ceresoli@xxxxxxxxxxx> > > --- > > drivers/clk/tegra/clk-tegra-periph.c | 2 +- > > 1 file changed, 1 insertion(+), 1 deletion(-) > > > > diff --git a/drivers/clk/tegra/clk-tegra-periph.c b/drivers/clk/tegra/clk-tegra-periph.c > > index 4dcf7f7cb8a0..806d835ca0d2 100644 > > --- a/drivers/clk/tegra/clk-tegra-periph.c > > +++ b/drivers/clk/tegra/clk-tegra-periph.c > > @@ -615,7 +615,6 @@ static struct tegra_periph_init_data periph_clks[] = { > > INT("vde", mux_pllp_pllc_pllm_clkm, CLK_SOURCE_VDE, 61, 0, tegra_clk_vde), > > INT("vi", mux_pllm_pllc_pllp_plla, CLK_SOURCE_VI, 20, 0, tegra_clk_vi), > > INT("epp", mux_pllm_pllc_pllp_plla, CLK_SOURCE_EPP, 19, 0, tegra_clk_epp), > > - INT("host1x", mux_pllm_pllc_pllp_plla, CLK_SOURCE_HOST1X, 28, 0, tegra_clk_host1x), > > INT("mpe", mux_pllm_pllc_pllp_plla, CLK_SOURCE_MPE, 60, 0, tegra_clk_mpe), > > INT("2d", mux_pllm_pllc_pllp_plla, CLK_SOURCE_2D, 21, 0, tegra_clk_gr2d), > > INT("3d", mux_pllm_pllc_pllp_plla, CLK_SOURCE_3D, 24, 0, tegra_clk_gr3d), > > @@ -664,6 +663,7 @@ static struct tegra_periph_init_data periph_clks[] = { > > MUX("owr", mux_pllp_pllc_clkm, CLK_SOURCE_OWR, 71, TEGRA_PERIPH_ON_APB, tegra_clk_owr_8), > > MUX("nor", mux_pllp_pllc_pllm_clkm, CLK_SOURCE_NOR, 42, 0, tegra_clk_nor), > > MUX("mipi", mux_pllp_pllc_pllm_clkm, CLK_SOURCE_MIPI, 50, TEGRA_PERIPH_ON_APB, tegra_clk_mipi), > > + MUX("host1x", mux_pllm_pllc_pllp_plla, CLK_SOURCE_HOST1X, 28, 0, tegra_clk_host1x), > > MUX("vi_sensor", mux_pllm_pllc_pllp_plla, CLK_SOURCE_VI_SENSOR, 20, TEGRA_PERIPH_NO_RESET, tegra_clk_vi_sensor), > > MUX("vi_sensor", mux_pllc_pllp_plla, CLK_SOURCE_VI_SENSOR, 20, TEGRA_PERIPH_NO_RESET, tegra_clk_vi_sensor_9), > > MUX("cilab", mux_pllp_pllc_clkm, CLK_SOURCE_CILAB, 144, 0, tegra_clk_cilab), > > This was attempted in the past > https://lore.kernel.org/all/20180723085010.GK1636@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx/ > > I assume here you're also porting the downstream patches to upstream. > This one is too questionable. The host1x clock shouldn't affect overall > performance to begin with. It doesn't make sense to use fractional clock > just for getting extra KHz. Thank you for the review and for the pointer! Indeed I'm not sure this patch brings an actual improvement to my use case, however I reached it by trying to replicate the configuration on a known-working kernel 3.1, which uses a 1.5 divider. This seems to be the same reason that led to the 2018 patch that also got rejected. I'll be OK with dropping this patch after I have a 100% working setup with an integer divider, which is very likely given your reply. But it took time before I found the root cause of this issue, and I would like to avoid other people waste time in the future, so what about adding a comment there? What about: /* * The host1x clock shouldn't affect overall performance. It doesn't * make sense to use fractional clock just for getting extra KHz, so * let's pretend it's an integer divider */ ? -- Luca Ceresoli, Bootlin Embedded Linux and Kernel engineering https://bootlin.com