On 01-06-21, 13:12, Stephan Gerhold wrote:
quoted
+ child4: consumer@12341000 {
+ compatible = "foo,consumer";
+ reg = <0x12341000 0x1000>;
+ power-domains = <&parent4>, <&parent5>;
+ assigned-performance-states = <0>, <256>;
+ };
Bjorn already asked this in v1 [1]:
quoted
May I ask how this is different from saying something like:
required-opps = <&??>, <&rpmpd_opp_svs>;
and maybe this was already discussed further elsewhere. But I think at
the very least we need some clarification in the commit message + the
binding documentation how your new property relates to the existing
"required-opps" binding.
Because even if it might not be implemented at the moment,
Documentation/devicetree/bindings/power/power_domain.txt actually also
specifies "required-opps" for device nodes e.g. with the following example:
leaky-device0@12350000 {
compatible = "foo,i-leak-current";
reg = <0x12350000 0x1000>;
power-domains = <&power 0>;
required-opps = <&domain0_opp_0>;
};
It looks like Viresh added that in commit e856f078bcf1
("OPP: Introduce "required-opp" property").
And in general I think it's a bit inconsistent that we usually refer to
performance states with phandles into the OPP table, but the
assigned-performance-states suddenly use "raw numbers".
I must have missed that discussion, sorry about that.
The required-opps property, when present in device's node directly, is about the
(default) OPPs to choose for that device's normal functioning as they may not do
DVFS.
Good point Stephan.
--
viresh