Re: [linux-sunxi] Re: [PATCH v2 4/4] arm64: dts: allwinner: h6: Use RSB for AXP805 PMIC connection
From: Chen-Yu Tsai <hidden>
Date: 2021-01-13 09:18:04
Also in:
linux-arm-kernel, linux-devicetree, linux-gpio, lkml
On Thu, Jan 7, 2021 at 6:27 PM Samuel Holland [off-list ref] wrote:
On 1/6/21 5:38 AM, Chen-Yu Tsai wrote:quoted
On Wed, Jan 6, 2021 at 7:06 PM Maxime Ripard [off-list ref] wrote:quoted
On Mon, Jan 04, 2021 at 10:54:19AM +0000, André Przywara wrote:quoted
On 03/01/2021 10:00, Samuel Holland wrote:quoted
On boards where the only peripheral connected to PL0/PL1 is an X-Powers PMIC, configure the connection to use the RSB bus rather than the I2C bus. Compared to the I2C controller that shares the pins, the RSB controller allows a higher bus frequency, and it is more CPU-efficient.But is it really necessary to change the DTs for those boards in this way? It means those newer DTs now become incompatible with older kernels, and I don't know if those reasons above really justify this. I understand that we officially don't care about "newer DTs on older kernels", but do we really need to break this deliberately, for no pressing reasons? P.S. I am fine with supporting RSB on H6, and even using it on new DTs, just want to avoid breaking existing ones.Doing so would also introduce some inconsistencies, one more thing to consider during reviews, and would require more testing effort. I'm not sure that stretching our - already fairly sparse - resources thin would be very wise here, especially for something that we don't have to do and for a setup that isn't really used that much.As soon as some software component starts running RSB, (which I assume is what Samuel is planning to do in Crust?), there's a chance that it doesn't switch the chip back to I2C. And then Linux won't be able to access it.Crust can handle either way via a config option, which currently defaults to I2C for H6. It must use the same selection as Linux, not only because of the PMIC mode, but also because of the pinctrl.
Could Crust be made to also handle pinctrl?
TF-A is already converted to use RSB[1], and it does switch the PMIC back to I2C before handing off to U-Boot[2]. So new TF-A + old Linux is fine. However, Linux currently does not switch the PMIC back. So the most likely problem from this patch is that, with new Linux + old TF-A, TF-A will be unable to power down the board or access regulators after an SoC reset. I expect there will be a TF-A release between now and when 5.12 hits stable, but people tend not upgrade their U-Boot/TF-A very often. We could solve this by having the Linux RSB driver switch all child devices back to I2C in .shutdown, or by dropping this patch and only using RSB for new boards (which would also address Andre's concern).
This will work for most cases, except in a kernel panic or IIRC direct reboot using sysrq. So it's not robust as we'd like it to be. ChenYu
Cheers, Samuel [1]: https://review.trustedfirmware.org/c/TF-A/trusted-firmware-a/+/7576 [2]: https://review.trustedfirmware.org/c/TF-A/trusted-firmware-a/+/7575quoted
So I'm for keeping things consistent and converting all users to RSB. ChenYu-- You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "linux-sunxi" group. To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email to linux-sunxi+unsubscribe@googlegroups.com. To view this discussion on the web, visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/linux-sunxi/bc95a8d2-ebec-489c-10af-fd5a80ea1276%40sholland.org.