Message ID | 1448376627-12255-1-git-send-email-wsa@the-dreams.de (mailing list archive) |
---|---|
State | Not Applicable |
Delegated to: | Geert Uytterhoeven |
Headers | show |
> Note that I could not yet read EDID with Magnus' Koelsch.
This has been tackled as well now. The clock for the GPIO controller was
off, so no interrupt was passed through.
Hi Wolfram, On Wed, Nov 25, 2015 at 6:05 AM, Wolfram Sang <wsa@the-dreams.de> wrote: > >> Note that I could not yet read EDID with Magnus' Koelsch. > > This has been tackled as well now. The clock for the GPIO controller was > off, so no interrupt was passed through. Thanks a lot for your efforts! When you have time, can you please show me the patch that fixes that GPIO interrupt problem? I'm asking because I may have ran into a similar issue on Gose or Alt. Cheers, / magnus -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-sh" in the body of a message to majordomo@vger.kernel.org More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html
> > This has been tackled as well now. The clock for the GPIO controller was > > off, so no interrupt was passed through. > > Thanks a lot for your efforts! When you have time, can you please show > me the patch that fixes that GPIO interrupt problem? I'm asking > because I may have ran into a similar issue on Gose or Alt. For Koelsch, this simply meant I reverted Geert's clocks-off patch. But there is a fundamental problem below: GPIO interrupts described with the "interrupts" property in DT do not get the underlying GPIO requested. And if noone else is using the GPIO block, its clock may be turned off. I have an idea how to fix it, need to check priorities of the other tasks, though. BTW, the continous EDID read test on your board is currently at >360000 successful reads, a not a single failure :)
Hi Wolfram, On Wed, Nov 25, 2015 at 3:48 PM, Wolfram Sang <wsa@the-dreams.de> wrote: > >> > This has been tackled as well now. The clock for the GPIO controller was >> > off, so no interrupt was passed through. >> >> Thanks a lot for your efforts! When you have time, can you please show >> me the patch that fixes that GPIO interrupt problem? I'm asking >> because I may have ran into a similar issue on Gose or Alt. > > For Koelsch, this simply meant I reverted Geert's clocks-off patch. But > there is a fundamental problem below: GPIO interrupts described with the > "interrupts" property in DT do not get the underlying GPIO requested. > And if noone else is using the GPIO block, its clock may be turned off. > > I have an idea how to fix it, need to check priorities of the other > tasks, though. I guess you mean that the GPIO callbacks include Runtime PM handling however for irq_chip Runtime PM may not be hooked up so the GPIO block is in such case is not powered on / get clock enabled? > BTW, the continous EDID read test on your board is currently at >360000 > successful reads, a not a single failure :) Excellent, thank you! / magnus -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-sh" in the body of a message to majordomo@vger.kernel.org More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html
> I guess you mean that the GPIO callbacks include Runtime PM handling > however for irq_chip Runtime PM may not be hooked up so the GPIO block > is in such case is not powered on / get clock enabled? Yes. There is another drawback when GPIOs are not properly requested. It is still possible to request them from userspace although a kernel driver is using them. I am playing with the idea that the GPIO core auto-requests GPIOs which are not already requested but still set up as interrupts.
On 11/25/2015 09:27 AM, Wolfram Sang wrote: > >> I guess you mean that the GPIO callbacks include Runtime PM handling >> however for irq_chip Runtime PM may not be hooked up so the GPIO block >> is in such case is not powered on / get clock enabled? > > Yes. There is another drawback when GPIOs are not properly requested. It > is still possible to request them from userspace although a kernel > driver is using them. I am playing with the idea that the GPIO core > auto-requests GPIOs which are not already requested but still set up as > interrupts. I think the GPIO core already reserves the pins that are requested as IRQs. See gpiochip_lock_as_irq(). As for PM see this discussion http://lkml.iu.edu/hypermail/linux/kernel/1511.1/01645.html - Lars
On Thu, Nov 26, 2015 at 01:43:33PM +0100, Lars-Peter Clausen wrote: > On 11/25/2015 09:27 AM, Wolfram Sang wrote: > > > >> I guess you mean that the GPIO callbacks include Runtime PM handling > >> however for irq_chip Runtime PM may not be hooked up so the GPIO block > >> is in such case is not powered on / get clock enabled? > > > > Yes. There is another drawback when GPIOs are not properly requested. It > > is still possible to request them from userspace although a kernel > > driver is using them. I am playing with the idea that the GPIO core > > auto-requests GPIOs which are not already requested but still set up as > > interrupts. > > I think the GPIO core already reserves the pins that are requested as IRQs. > See gpiochip_lock_as_irq(). I could still export them via sysfs. They were also not showing up in /sys/kernel/debug/gpio. > As for PM see this discussion > http://lkml.iu.edu/hypermail/linux/kernel/1511.1/01645.html Nice! Thanks for this pointer.
diff --git a/drivers/gpu/drm/i2c/adv7511.c b/drivers/gpu/drm/i2c/adv7511.c index 00416f23b5cb5f..85e994796d96a4 100644 --- a/drivers/gpu/drm/i2c/adv7511.c +++ b/drivers/gpu/drm/i2c/adv7511.c @@ -362,12 +362,19 @@ static void adv7511_power_on(struct adv7511 *adv7511) { adv7511->current_edid_segment = -1; - regmap_write(adv7511->regmap, ADV7511_REG_INT(0), - ADV7511_INT0_EDID_READY); - regmap_write(adv7511->regmap, ADV7511_REG_INT(1), - ADV7511_INT1_DDC_ERROR); regmap_update_bits(adv7511->regmap, ADV7511_REG_POWER, ADV7511_POWER_POWER_DOWN, 0); + if (adv7511->i2c_main->irq) { + /* + * Documentation says the INT_ENABLE registers are reset in + * POWER_DOWN mode. My tests with a 7511w show something else + * but let's stick to the documentation. + */ + regmap_write(adv7511->regmap, ADV7511_REG_INT_ENABLE(0), + ADV7511_INT0_EDID_READY); + regmap_write(adv7511->regmap, ADV7511_REG_INT_ENABLE(1), + ADV7511_INT1_DDC_ERROR); + } /* * Per spec it is allowed to pulse the HDP signal to indicate that the @@ -567,12 +574,14 @@ static int adv7511_get_modes(struct drm_encoder *encoder, /* Reading the EDID only works if the device is powered */ if (!adv7511->powered) { - regmap_write(adv7511->regmap, ADV7511_REG_INT(0), - ADV7511_INT0_EDID_READY); - regmap_write(adv7511->regmap, ADV7511_REG_INT(1), - ADV7511_INT1_DDC_ERROR); regmap_update_bits(adv7511->regmap, ADV7511_REG_POWER, ADV7511_POWER_POWER_DOWN, 0); + if (adv7511->i2c_main->irq) { + regmap_write(adv7511->regmap, ADV7511_REG_INT_ENABLE(0), + ADV7511_INT0_EDID_READY); + regmap_write(adv7511->regmap, ADV7511_REG_INT_ENABLE(1), + ADV7511_INT1_DDC_ERROR); + } adv7511->current_edid_segment = -1; }