Thread (20 messages) 20 messages, 5 authors, 2017-03-30

[PATCH v7 1/7] clocksource/drivers/clksrc-evt-probe: Describe with the DT both the clocksource and the clockevent

From: mark.rutland@arm.com (Mark Rutland)
Date: 2017-03-29 10:50:58
Also in: linux-devicetree, linux-rockchip, lkml

Hi,

On Wed, Mar 29, 2017 at 11:22:10AM +0200, Daniel Lezcano wrote:
On Tue, Mar 28, 2017 at 08:51:46PM -0500, Rob Herring wrote:
quoted
On Wed, Mar 22, 2017 at 06:48:28PM +0300, Alexander Kochetkov wrote:
quoted
From: Daniel Lezcano <redacted>

The CLOCKSOURCE_OF_DECLARE() was introduced before the
CLOCKEVENT_OF_DECLARE() and that resulted in some abuse where the
clockevent and the clocksource are both initialized in the same init
routine.

With the introduction of the CLOCKEVENT_OF_DECLARE(), the driver can
now split the clocksource and the clockevent init code. However, the
device tree may specify a single node, so the same node will be passed
to the clockevent/clocksource's init function, with the same base
address.

with this patch it is possible to specify an attribute to the timer's node to
specify if it is a clocksource or a clockevent and define two timers node.
Daniel and I discussed and agreed against this a while back. What 
changed?
Hi Rob,
quoted
quoted
For example:

        timer: timer at 98400000 {
                compatible = "moxa,moxart-timer";
                reg = <0x98400000 0x42>;
This overlaps the next node. You can change this to 0x10, but are these 
really 2 independent h/w blocks? Don't design the nodes around the 
current needs of Linux.
Mmh, thanks for raising this. Conceptually speaking there are two (or more)
different entities, the clocksource and the clockevents but they share the same
IP block.
From the DT's PoV, this is one entity, which is the IP block.
The clocksource/clockevent concept is a Linux implementation detail. The
DT cannot and should not be aware of that.

[...]
quoted
quoted
                interrupts = <19 1>;
                clocks = <&coreclk>;
                clockevent;
This is not needed. The presence of "interrupts" is enough to say use 
this timer for clockevent.
Yes, that is true if no drivers was already taking CLOCKSOURCE_OF and
initializing the clockevent. The driver will pass through the clocksource_probe
function, check the interrupt and bail out because there is an interrupt
declared and assume it is a clockevent, so no initialization for the driver.
IOW, it is not backward compatible.

We need this attribute somehow in order to separate clearly a clocksource or a
clockevent with a new implementation.
Why? A single IP block can provide the functionality of both (though
there are reasons that functionality may be mutually exclusive). What is
the benefit of this split?
quoted
quoted
With this approach, we allow a mechanism to clearly define a clocksource or a
clockevent without aerobatics we can find around in some drivers:
	timer-sp804.c, arc-timer.c, dw_apb_timer_of.c, mps2-timer.c,
	renesas-ostm.c, time-efm32.c, time-lpc32xx.c.
These all already have bindings and work. What problem are you trying to 
solve other than restructuring Linux?
Yes, there is already the bindings, but that force to do some hackish
initialization.
Here, you are forcing hackish DT changes that do not truly describe HW.
How is that better?
I would like to give the opportunity to declare separately a clocksource and a
clockevent, in order to have full control of how this is initialized.
To me it sounds like what we need is Linux infrastructure that allows
one to register a device as having both clockevent/clocksource
functionality.

That way, we can choose to do something sane at boot time, and if the
user really wants specific devices used in specific ways, they can
request that.

Thanks,
Mark.
Keyboard shortcuts
hback out one level
jnext message in thread
kprevious message in thread
ldrill in
Escclose help / fold thread tree
?toggle this help