Thread (38 messages) 38 messages, 4 authors, 2016-12-20

[PATCHv4 00/15] clk: ti: add support for hwmod clocks

From: Stephen Boyd <hidden>
Date: 2016-12-13 00:49:14
Also in: linux-clk, linux-omap

On 12/12, Michael Turquette wrote:
Quoting Tero Kristo (2016-12-02 00:15:53)
quoted
On 29/10/16 02:37, Stephen Boyd wrote:
quoted
On 10/28, Tero Kristo wrote:
quoted
Eventually that should happen. However, we have plenty of legacy
code still in place which depend on clk_get functionality within
kernel. The major contributing factor is the hwmod codebase, for
which we have plans to:

- get this clock driver merged
- implement a new interconnect driver for OMAP family SoCs
- interconnect driver will use DT handles for fetching clocks,
rather than clock aliases
- reset handling will be implemented as part of the interconnect
driver somehow (no prototype / clear plans for that as of yet)
- all the hwmod stuff can be dropped

The clock alias handling is still needed as a transition phase until
all the above is done, then we can start dropping them. Basically
anything that is using omap_hwmod depends on the clock aliases right
now.
Ok, sounds good. Thanks.
Stephen, any final comments on this series? I guess its too late to push 
for 4.10, but I would like to get this merged early for 4.11 window.
Hi Tero,

No final comments from me. I needed to go back and forth with Tony about
the clockdomain modeling, but it seems sensible to create clock
providers from the clock domains if you want to pass those struct clk
objects down to the drivers.

One thing I wasn't able to follow exactly in the code is how the
clockdomains are linking parent clocks from cm1, cm2, etc to the clock
domains. Are the clockdomain providers calling clk_get() on the clocks
that it *consumes*, or are the clockdomain providers never calling
clk_get() on those clocks and just establishing the tree hierarchy at
clk_register() time?

Unless Stephen has any more review comments we can merge this into a
clk-next based on v4.10-rc1 when that drops.
I spent a bunch of time looking at this again today. From a DT
perspective we don't want to have clocks or clockdomains nodes
below the cm1/cm2/prm dt nodes. That's getting to the point of
describing individual elements of a device that should be
described in the driver instead of DT.

I'd also prefer we didn't have cm1/cm2/prm nodes and just had one
prcm node as the clock provider (#clock-cells) because that's the
aligned register address space that's visible on the bus.  From
my perspective cm1/cm2/prm look like macros that are put inside
the prcm container and they're at least aligned on some register
address boundary so I'm not too worried if we keep describing
down to the level of these modules in DT. Anything beyond that is
not good though.

Finally we come to using clock providers or genpds for the clock
domains. If we don't put clockdomains into DT (because I don't
want clockdomain nodes) then this problem almost goes away. At
least, I don't really care what happens here because it will be
an internal TI prcm driver question of implementation. A clk
consumer will just see a provider that outputs some sort of clk.
If that happens to go through a clockdomain and we need to toggle
some bits inside the domain registers to make the clk actually
output a signal, that's fine. The prcm driver can take care of it
behind the scenes. Or at a later date we can model the domain as
a genpd and have the framework turn on/off genpds attached to
certain clocks. There's a lot of freedom here as long as we don't
put things in DT.

-- 
Qualcomm Innovation Center, Inc. is a member of Code Aurora Forum,
a Linux Foundation Collaborative Project
Keyboard shortcuts
hback out one level
jnext message in thread
kprevious message in thread
ldrill in
Escclose help / fold thread tree
?toggle this help