[PATCH 5/9] clocksource: tegra: Enable ARM arch_timer with TSC
From: Marc Zyngier <hidden>
Date: 2012-12-20 17:09:22
Also in:
linux-devicetree, linux-tegra, lkml
On 20/12/12 14:42, Hiroshi Doyu wrote:
Marc Zyngier [off-list ref] wrote @ Thu, 20 Dec 2012 14:32:21 +0100:quoted
On 20/12/12 12:55, Peter De Schrijver wrote:quoted
On Thu, Dec 20, 2012 at 01:33:42PM +0100, Marc Zyngier wrote:quoted
On 20/12/12 12:22, Peter De Schrijver wrote:quoted
quoted
quoted
quoted
quoted
+ + /* CNTFRQ */ + asm("mcr p15, 0, %0, c14, c0, 0\n" : : "r" (freq)); + asm("mrc p15, 0, %0, c14, c0, 0\n" : "=r" (val)); + BUG_ON(val != freq);This is scary. CNTFRQ is only writable from secure mode, and will explode in any other situation. Also, writing to CNTFRQ doesn't change the timer frequency! This is just a way for secure mode to tell the rest of the world the frequency the timer is ticking at. Unless you've wired the input clock to be able to change the frequency?ATM, our upstream kernel is expected in secure mode. This situation may be changed later, though....I appreciate this. But I expect this kernel to be also used on the non-secure side if someone tried to run KVM with it. And this would go bang right away.But the guest wouldn't necessarily have this peripheral, or any other Tegra114 peripheral for that matter?The problem is not so much the guest but the host. The host has to be booted in non-secure, so just saying "we do not support non-secure" is not a very convincing argument. Unless of course you've already decided that you don't want to support KVM on this SoC...I guess that means we can't support KVM yet. Tegra does not have a secure monitor by default. It all depends on what that system integrator does.VExpress doesn't have a secure monitor either, and yet we run KVM on it (by switching to non-secure before loading the kernel). Same for Exynos5. What I'm trying to say is that this code is rather pointless (this should be done by the firmware/bootloader, not the kernel, or the information should be provided in DT if CNTFRQ is not set)."tegra114.dtsi" has the folloiwng "tsc" entry. So can we consider that if dts has this entry, CNTFRQ is not set, which implies it's in secure mode. kernel should set it up by itself? Otherwise, skip this setup and use it. For example: tsc { compatible = "nvidia,tegra114-tsc"; reg = <0x700f0000 0x20000>; + setup-cntfrq; }; Is this what you explained in the above? At least, kernel can survive without bootloader/firmware support, ATM.
No. The DT should only describe the hardware, and not something that is Linux specific. Just use the "clock-frequency" attribute in the timer arch-timer node, and get rid of this CNTFRQ setting. The driver already knows how to deal with this situation if this attribute is set. Thanks, M. -- Jazz is not dead. It just smells funny...