Message ID | 1461951756-16804-2-git-send-email-kernel@martin.sperl.org (mailing list archive) |
---|---|
State | New, archived |
Headers | show |
kernel@martin.sperl.org writes: > From: Martin Sperl <kernel@martin.sperl.org> > > The bcm2835 firmware enables several clocks and plls before > booting the linux kernel. > > These plls should never get disabled as it may result in a > stopped system clock and more. > > So during probing we check if the clock is enabled > and if it is then mark that clock with CLK_IS_CRITICAL. > > As a consequence this will also enable the corresponding > parent plls and pll-divs. > > This is intended as a stop-gap until CLK_ENABLE_HAND_OFF > becomes available, at which point it should be used instead. > > Signed-off-by: Martin Sperl <kernel@martin.sperl.org> I still think that we don't want this patch. We should be able to disable clocks that the firmware turned on, unless they really need to stay on. If you have troubles on the upstream DT, let's talk about individual clocks.
> On 02.05.2016, at 17:36, Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net> wrote: > > kernel@martin.sperl.org writes: > >> From: Martin Sperl <kernel@martin.sperl.org> >> >> The bcm2835 firmware enables several clocks and plls before >> booting the linux kernel. >> >> These plls should never get disabled as it may result in a >> stopped system clock and more. >> >> So during probing we check if the clock is enabled >> and if it is then mark that clock with CLK_IS_CRITICAL. >> >> As a consequence this will also enable the corresponding >> parent plls and pll-divs. >> >> This is intended as a stop-gap until CLK_ENABLE_HAND_OFF >> becomes available, at which point it should be used instead. >> >> Signed-off-by: Martin Sperl <kernel@martin.sperl.org> > > I still think that we don't want this patch. We should be able to > disable clocks that the firmware turned on, unless they really need to > stay on. If you have troubles on the upstream DT, let's talk about > individual clocks. May I ask you what is your main concern about using CLK_IS_CRITICAL as a stop-gap/in general? This is just a stop-gap until we get CLK_ENABLE_HAND_OFF merged and I really want to use HAND_OFF as soon as possible, that is why I have split it into 2 patches. We essentially just replace the CLK_IS_CRITICAL with CLK_ENABLE_HAND_OFF (plus comments and debug messages). Any custom temporary code for specific clocks (which you propose) is much more complicated than this simple patch and does not handle things better in any way. Also the current situation of the machine crashing when releasing the PCM clock when the parent is PLLC or PLLD is worse than having some clocks/pll running unnecessarily. Also this is an incentive to merge HAND_OFF - there is now an immediate user that would make immediate use of it.
Martin Sperl <kernel@martin.sperl.org> writes: >> On 02.05.2016, at 17:36, Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net> wrote: >> >> kernel@martin.sperl.org writes: >> >>> From: Martin Sperl <kernel@martin.sperl.org> >>> >>> The bcm2835 firmware enables several clocks and plls before >>> booting the linux kernel. >>> >>> These plls should never get disabled as it may result in a >>> stopped system clock and more. >>> >>> So during probing we check if the clock is enabled >>> and if it is then mark that clock with CLK_IS_CRITICAL. >>> >>> As a consequence this will also enable the corresponding >>> parent plls and pll-divs. >>> >>> This is intended as a stop-gap until CLK_ENABLE_HAND_OFF >>> becomes available, at which point it should be used instead. >>> >>> Signed-off-by: Martin Sperl <kernel@martin.sperl.org> >> >> I still think that we don't want this patch. We should be able to >> disable clocks that the firmware turned on, unless they really need to >> stay on. If you have troubles on the upstream DT, let's talk about >> individual clocks. > > May I ask you what is your main concern about using > CLK_IS_CRITICAL as a stop-gap/in general? Burning power when you shouldn't, which is a bug. > Also the current situation of the machine crashing when releasing the > PCM clock when the parent is PLLC or PLLD is worse than having some > clocks/pll running unnecessarily. Are you saying this happens on the upstream kernel? This sounds like a bug you'd see in the downstream kernel because they haven't hooked up the clocks in their DT.
> On 03.05.2016, at 03:13, Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net> wrote: > > Martin Sperl <kernel@martin.sperl.org> writes: > >>> On 02.05.2016, at 17:36, Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net> wrote: >>> >>> kernel@martin.sperl.org writes: >>> >>>> From: Martin Sperl <kernel@martin.sperl.org> >>>> >>>> The bcm2835 firmware enables several clocks and plls before >>>> booting the linux kernel. >>>> >>>> These plls should never get disabled as it may result in a >>>> stopped system clock and more. >>>> >>>> So during probing we check if the clock is enabled >>>> and if it is then mark that clock with CLK_IS_CRITICAL. >>>> >>>> As a consequence this will also enable the corresponding >>>> parent plls and pll-divs. >>>> >>>> This is intended as a stop-gap until CLK_ENABLE_HAND_OFF >>>> becomes available, at which point it should be used instead. >>>> >>>> Signed-off-by: Martin Sperl <kernel@martin.sperl.org> >>> >>> I still think that we don't want this patch. We should be able to >>> disable clocks that the firmware turned on, unless they really need to >>> stay on. If you have troubles on the upstream DT, let's talk about >>> individual clocks. >> >> May I ask you what is your main concern about using >> CLK_IS_CRITICAL as a stop-gap/in general? > > Burning power when you shouldn't, which is a bug. It is a bug, but it is better than a crash that happens currently because of a stopped clock. Also there is a proposed way forward when hand-off becomes available. > >> Also the current situation of the machine crashing when releasing the >> PCM clock when the parent is PLLC or PLLD is worse than having some >> clocks/pll running unnecessarily. > > Are you saying this happens on the upstream kernel? This sounds like a > bug you'd see in the downstream kernel because they haven't hooked up > the clocks in their DT. This happens for both upstream and downstream when using cprman... You remember the main-uart crashing discussion (when loaded as a module or not used as the kernel console?) it is exactly what an unclaimed clock is triggering when the clock Is prepared/enabled and then released. I have also seen the same issue happen with PCM without the patch - as soon as we request a frequency which will use pllc/d-per as the parent, and we later release the clock the system crashes - but there only if we run the dt with minimal clocks using cprman, as it is hidden as soon as you increase enable count of the plls because of an enabled clock by a different device that also consumes the same pll. So this bug is mostly hidden behind the complete dts that just consumes lots of parent clocks, but it still may occur when we select a frequency that will select the firmware enabled but not claimed plla_per - no idea what stopping that pll would trigger in the system. Hence we need this patch for the running clocks , but we also need it for the pll_divs, so actually my patch is incomplete!
diff --git a/drivers/clk/bcm/clk-bcm2835.c b/drivers/clk/bcm/clk-bcm2835.c index 35f8de7..03b7f01 100644 --- a/drivers/clk/bcm/clk-bcm2835.c +++ b/drivers/clk/bcm/clk-bcm2835.c @@ -1251,6 +1251,14 @@ static struct clk *bcm2835_register_clock(struct bcm2835_cprman *cprman, init.flags |= CLK_SET_RATE_GATE | CLK_SET_PARENT_GATE; } + /* if the clock is running, then enable CRITICAL */ + if (cprman_read(cprman, data->ctl_reg) & CM_ENABLE) { + dev_dbg(cprman->dev, + "found firmware enabled clock %s - enabling critical\n", + data->name); + init.flags |= CLK_IS_CRITICAL; + } + clock = devm_kzalloc(cprman->dev, sizeof(*clock), GFP_KERNEL); if (!clock) return NULL;