2024-05-27 12:42:22

by Geert Uytterhoeven

[permalink] [raw]
Subject: [PATCH/RFC 0/3] pmdomain: renesas: rmobile-sysc: Remove serial console handling

Hi all,

Since commit a47cf07f60dcb02d ("serial: core: Call
device_set_awake_path() for console port"), the serial driver properly
handles the case where the serial console is part of the awake path, and
it looked like we could start removing special serial console handling
from PM Domain drivers like the R-Mobile SYSC PM Domain driver.
Unfortunately the devil is in the details, as usual...

Earlycon relies on the serial port to be initialized by the firmware
and/or bootloader. Linux is not aware of any hardware dependencies that
must be met to keep the port working, and thus cannot guarantee they
stay met, until the full serial driver takes over.

E.g. all unused clocks and unused PM Domains are disabled in a late
initcall. As this happens after the full serial driver has taken over,
the serial port's clock and/or PM Domain are no longer deemed unused,
and this is typically not a problem.

However, if the serial port's clock or PM Domain is shared with another
device, and that other device is runtime-suspended before the full
serial driver has probed, the serial port's clock and/or PM Domain will
be disabled inadvertently. Any subsequent serial console output will
cause a crash or system lock-up. E.g. on R/SH-Mobile SoCs, the serial
ports share their PM Domain with several other I/O devices. After the
use of pwm (Armadillo-800-EVA) or i2c (KZM-A9-GT) during early boot,
before the full serial driver takes over, the PM Domain containing the
early serial port is powered down, causing a lock-up when booted with
"earlycon".

This RFC patch series aims to provide a mechanism for handling this, and
to fix it for the PM Domain case:
1. The first patch provides a mechanism to let the clock and/or PM
Domain subsystem or drivers handle this, by exporting the clock and
PM Domain dependencies for the serial port, as available in the
system's device tree,
2. The second patch introduces a new flag to handle a PM domain that
must be kept powered-on during early boot, and by setting this flag
if the PM Domain contains the serial console (originally I handled
this inside rmobile-sysc, but it turned out to be easy to
generalize this to other platforms in the core PM Domain code).
3. The third patch removes the no longer needed special console
handling from the R-Mobile SYSC PM Domain driver.

I did not fix the similar clock issue, as it is more complex (there can
be multiple clocks, and each clock provider can have its own value of
#clock-cells), and I do not need it for Renesas ARM platforms.

This has been tested on the APE6-EVM, Armadillo-800-EVA, and KZM-A9-GT
development boards, with and without earlycon, including s2ram with and
without no_console_suspend.

Notes:
- This should not be needed on RZ/G3S, where each serial port device
has its own PM Domain,
- drivers/clk/imx/clk.c and drivers/pmdomain/imx/scu-pd.c have special
handling for the of_stdout device, but is probably not affected, as
each serial port seems to share its PM Domain only with the serial
port's clock controller.

Thanks for your comments!

Geert Uytterhoeven (3):
earlycon: Export clock and PM Domain info from FDT
pmdomain: core: Avoid earlycon power-down
pmdomain: renesas: rmobile-sysc: Remove serial console handling

drivers/pmdomain/core.c | 24 ++++++++++++++++--
drivers/pmdomain/renesas/rmobile-sysc.c | 33 +------------------------
drivers/tty/serial/earlycon.c | 14 ++++++++++-
include/linux/pm_domain.h | 4 +++
include/linux/serial_core.h | 10 ++++++++
5 files changed, 50 insertions(+), 35 deletions(-)

--
2.34.1

Gr{oetje,eeting}s,

Geert

--
Geert Uytterhoeven -- There's lots of Linux beyond ia32 -- [email protected]

In personal conversations with technical people, I call myself a hacker. But
when I'm talking to journalists I just say "programmer" or something like that.
-- Linus Torvalds


2024-05-27 12:47:45

by Geert Uytterhoeven

[permalink] [raw]
Subject: [PATCHPATCH 3/3] pmdomain: renesas: rmobile-sysc: Remove serial console handling

Since commit a47cf07f60dcb02d ("serial: core: Call
device_set_awake_path() for console port"), the serial driver properly
handles the case where the serial console is part of the awake path, so
the special serial console handling can be removed from the R-Mobile
SYSC PM Domain driver.

The PM Domain containing the serial port can now be powered down when
none of its devices are in use. Before, it was only powered down during
s2ram without no_console_suspend.

Signed-off-by: Geert Uytterhoeven <[email protected]>
---
drivers/pmdomain/renesas/rmobile-sysc.c | 33 +------------------------
1 file changed, 1 insertion(+), 32 deletions(-)

diff --git a/drivers/pmdomain/renesas/rmobile-sysc.c b/drivers/pmdomain/renesas/rmobile-sysc.c
index 0b77f37787d58f48..cc1f6f8b7a746850 100644
--- a/drivers/pmdomain/renesas/rmobile-sysc.c
+++ b/drivers/pmdomain/renesas/rmobile-sysc.c
@@ -10,7 +10,6 @@
* Copyright (C) 2011 Magnus Damm
*/
#include <linux/clk/renesas.h>
-#include <linux/console.h>
#include <linux/delay.h>
#include <linux/io.h>
#include <linux/iopoll.h>
@@ -31,8 +30,6 @@

struct rmobile_pm_domain {
struct generic_pm_domain genpd;
- struct dev_power_governor *gov;
- int (*suspend)(void);
void __iomem *base;
unsigned int bit_shift;
};
@@ -49,13 +46,6 @@ static int rmobile_pd_power_down(struct generic_pm_domain *genpd)
unsigned int mask = BIT(rmobile_pd->bit_shift);
u32 val;

- if (rmobile_pd->suspend) {
- int ret = rmobile_pd->suspend();
-
- if (ret)
- return ret;
- }
-
if (readl(rmobile_pd->base + PSTR) & mask) {
writel(mask, rmobile_pd->base + SPDCR);

@@ -98,7 +88,6 @@ static int rmobile_pd_power_up(struct generic_pm_domain *genpd)
static void rmobile_init_pm_domain(struct rmobile_pm_domain *rmobile_pd)
{
struct generic_pm_domain *genpd = &rmobile_pd->genpd;
- struct dev_power_governor *gov = rmobile_pd->gov;

genpd->flags |= GENPD_FLAG_PM_CLK | GENPD_FLAG_ACTIVE_WAKEUP;
genpd->attach_dev = cpg_mstp_attach_dev;
@@ -110,22 +99,12 @@ static void rmobile_init_pm_domain(struct rmobile_pm_domain *rmobile_pd)
__rmobile_pd_power_up(rmobile_pd);
}

- pm_genpd_init(genpd, gov ? : &simple_qos_governor, false);
-}
-
-static int rmobile_pd_suspend_console(void)
-{
- /*
- * Serial consoles make use of SCIF hardware located in this domain,
- * hence keep the power domain on if "no_console_suspend" is set.
- */
- return console_suspend_enabled ? 0 : -EBUSY;
+ pm_genpd_init(genpd, &simple_qos_governor, false);
}

enum pd_types {
PD_NORMAL,
PD_CPU,
- PD_CONSOLE,
PD_DEBUG,
PD_MEMCTL,
};
@@ -184,10 +163,6 @@ static void __init get_special_pds(void)
for_each_of_cpu_node(np)
add_special_pd(np, PD_CPU);

- /* PM domain containing console */
- if (of_stdout)
- add_special_pd(of_stdout, PD_CONSOLE);
-
/* PM domains containing other special devices */
for_each_matching_node_and_match(np, special_ids, &id)
add_special_pd(np, (uintptr_t)id->data);
@@ -227,12 +202,6 @@ static void __init rmobile_setup_pm_domain(struct device_node *np,
pd->genpd.flags |= GENPD_FLAG_ALWAYS_ON;
break;

- case PD_CONSOLE:
- pr_debug("PM domain %s contains serial console\n", name);
- pd->gov = &pm_domain_always_on_gov;
- pd->suspend = rmobile_pd_suspend_console;
- break;
-
case PD_DEBUG:
/*
* This domain contains the Coresight-ETM hardware block and
--
2.34.1


2024-06-05 09:39:10

by Ulf Hansson

[permalink] [raw]
Subject: Re: [PATCH/RFC 0/3] pmdomain: renesas: rmobile-sysc: Remove serial console handling

+ Tomi

On Mon, 27 May 2024 at 14:41, Geert Uytterhoeven
<[email protected]> wrote:
>
> Hi all,
>
> Since commit a47cf07f60dcb02d ("serial: core: Call
> device_set_awake_path() for console port"), the serial driver properly
> handles the case where the serial console is part of the awake path, and
> it looked like we could start removing special serial console handling
> from PM Domain drivers like the R-Mobile SYSC PM Domain driver.
> Unfortunately the devil is in the details, as usual...
>
> Earlycon relies on the serial port to be initialized by the firmware
> and/or bootloader. Linux is not aware of any hardware dependencies that
> must be met to keep the port working, and thus cannot guarantee they
> stay met, until the full serial driver takes over.
>
> E.g. all unused clocks and unused PM Domains are disabled in a late
> initcall. As this happens after the full serial driver has taken over,
> the serial port's clock and/or PM Domain are no longer deemed unused,
> and this is typically not a problem.
>
> However, if the serial port's clock or PM Domain is shared with another
> device, and that other device is runtime-suspended before the full
> serial driver has probed, the serial port's clock and/or PM Domain will
> be disabled inadvertently. Any subsequent serial console output will
> cause a crash or system lock-up. E.g. on R/SH-Mobile SoCs, the serial
> ports share their PM Domain with several other I/O devices. After the
> use of pwm (Armadillo-800-EVA) or i2c (KZM-A9-GT) during early boot,
> before the full serial driver takes over, the PM Domain containing the
> early serial port is powered down, causing a lock-up when booted with
> "earlycon".

Hi Geert,

Thanks for the detailed description of the problem! As pointed out in
regards to another similar recent patch [1], this is indeed a generic
problem, not limited to the serial console handling.

At Linaro Connect a few weeks ago I followed up with Saravana from the
earlier discussions at LPC last fall. We now have a generic solution
for genpd drafted on plain paper, based on fw_devlink and the
->sync_state() callback. I am currently working on the genpd series,
while Saravana will re-spin the series (can't find the link to the
last version) for the clock framework. Ideally, we want these things
to work in a very similar way.

That said, allow me to post the series for genpd in a week or two to
see if it can solve your problem too, for the serial console.

Kind regards
Uffe

[1]
https://lore.kernel.org/linux-arm-kernel/CAPDyKFqShuq98qV5nSPzSqwLLUZ7LxLvp1eihGRBkU4qUKdWwQ@mail.gmail.com/

>
> This RFC patch series aims to provide a mechanism for handling this, and
> to fix it for the PM Domain case:
> 1. The first patch provides a mechanism to let the clock and/or PM
> Domain subsystem or drivers handle this, by exporting the clock and
> PM Domain dependencies for the serial port, as available in the
> system's device tree,
> 2. The second patch introduces a new flag to handle a PM domain that
> must be kept powered-on during early boot, and by setting this flag
> if the PM Domain contains the serial console (originally I handled
> this inside rmobile-sysc, but it turned out to be easy to
> generalize this to other platforms in the core PM Domain code).
> 3. The third patch removes the no longer needed special console
> handling from the R-Mobile SYSC PM Domain driver.
>
> I did not fix the similar clock issue, as it is more complex (there can
> be multiple clocks, and each clock provider can have its own value of
> #clock-cells), and I do not need it for Renesas ARM platforms.

I will defer to Sarvana here, but ideally his series for the clock
framework should solve this case too.

>
> This has been tested on the APE6-EVM, Armadillo-800-EVA, and KZM-A9-GT
> development boards, with and without earlycon, including s2ram with and
> without no_console_suspend.
>
> Notes:
> - This should not be needed on RZ/G3S, where each serial port device
> has its own PM Domain,
> - drivers/clk/imx/clk.c and drivers/pmdomain/imx/scu-pd.c have special
> handling for the of_stdout device, but is probably not affected, as
> each serial port seems to share its PM Domain only with the serial
> port's clock controller.
>
> Thanks for your comments!
>
> Geert Uytterhoeven (3):
> earlycon: Export clock and PM Domain info from FDT
> pmdomain: core: Avoid earlycon power-down
> pmdomain: renesas: rmobile-sysc: Remove serial console handling
>
> drivers/pmdomain/core.c | 24 ++++++++++++++++--
> drivers/pmdomain/renesas/rmobile-sysc.c | 33 +------------------------
> drivers/tty/serial/earlycon.c | 14 ++++++++++-
> include/linux/pm_domain.h | 4 +++
> include/linux/serial_core.h | 10 ++++++++
> 5 files changed, 50 insertions(+), 35 deletions(-)
>
> --

Kind regards
Uffe

2024-06-05 10:42:37

by Tomi Valkeinen

[permalink] [raw]
Subject: Re: [PATCH/RFC 0/3] pmdomain: renesas: rmobile-sysc: Remove serial console handling

Hi Ulf,

On 05/06/2024 12:34, Ulf Hansson wrote:
> + Tomi
>
> On Mon, 27 May 2024 at 14:41, Geert Uytterhoeven
> <[email protected]> wrote:
>>
>> Hi all,
>>
>> Since commit a47cf07f60dcb02d ("serial: core: Call
>> device_set_awake_path() for console port"), the serial driver properly
>> handles the case where the serial console is part of the awake path, and
>> it looked like we could start removing special serial console handling
>> from PM Domain drivers like the R-Mobile SYSC PM Domain driver.
>> Unfortunately the devil is in the details, as usual...
>>
>> Earlycon relies on the serial port to be initialized by the firmware
>> and/or bootloader. Linux is not aware of any hardware dependencies that
>> must be met to keep the port working, and thus cannot guarantee they
>> stay met, until the full serial driver takes over.
>>
>> E.g. all unused clocks and unused PM Domains are disabled in a late
>> initcall. As this happens after the full serial driver has taken over,
>> the serial port's clock and/or PM Domain are no longer deemed unused,
>> and this is typically not a problem.
>>
>> However, if the serial port's clock or PM Domain is shared with another
>> device, and that other device is runtime-suspended before the full
>> serial driver has probed, the serial port's clock and/or PM Domain will
>> be disabled inadvertently. Any subsequent serial console output will
>> cause a crash or system lock-up. E.g. on R/SH-Mobile SoCs, the serial
>> ports share their PM Domain with several other I/O devices. After the
>> use of pwm (Armadillo-800-EVA) or i2c (KZM-A9-GT) during early boot,
>> before the full serial driver takes over, the PM Domain containing the
>> early serial port is powered down, causing a lock-up when booted with
>> "earlycon".
>
> Hi Geert,
>
> Thanks for the detailed description of the problem! As pointed out in
> regards to another similar recent patch [1], this is indeed a generic
> problem, not limited to the serial console handling.
>
> At Linaro Connect a few weeks ago I followed up with Saravana from the
> earlier discussions at LPC last fall. We now have a generic solution
> for genpd drafted on plain paper, based on fw_devlink and the
> ->sync_state() callback. I am currently working on the genpd series,
> while Saravana will re-spin the series (can't find the link to the
> last version) for the clock framework. Ideally, we want these things
> to work in a very similar way.
>
> That said, allow me to post the series for genpd in a week or two to
> see if it can solve your problem too, for the serial console.

Both the genpd and the clock solutions will make suppliers depend on all
their consumers to be probed, right?

I think it is a solution, and should be worked on, but it has the
drawback that suppliers that have consumers that will possibly never be
probed, will also never be able to turn off unused resources.

This was specifically the case with the TI ti-sci pmdomain case I was
looking at: the genpd driver (ti_sci_pm_domains.c) provides a lot of
genpds for totally unrelated devices, and so if, e.g., you don't have or
don't want to load a driver for the GPU, all PDs are affected.

Even here the solutions you mention will help: instead of things getting
broken because genpds get turned off while they are actually in use, the
genpds will be kept enabled, thus fixing the breakage. Unfortunately,
they'll be kept enabled forever.

I've been ill for quite a while so I haven't had the chance to look at
this more, but before that I was hacking around a bit with something I
named .partial_sync_state(). .sync_state() gets called when all the
consumers have probed, but .partial_sync_state() gets called when _a_
consumer has been probed.

For the .sync_state() things are easy for the driver, as it knows
everything related has been probed, but for .partial_sync_state() the
driver needs to track resources internally. .partial_sync_state() will
tell the driver that a consumer device has probed, the driver can then
find out which specific resources (genpds in my case) that consumer
refers to, and then... Well, that's how far I got with my hacks =).

So, I don't know if this .partial_sync_state() can even work, but I
think we do need something more on top of the .sync_state().

Tomi

>
> Kind regards
> Uffe
>
> [1]
> https://lore.kernel.org/linux-arm-kernel/CAPDyKFqShuq98qV5nSPzSqwLLUZ7LxLvp1eihGRBkU4qUKdWwQ@mail.gmail.com/
>
>>
>> This RFC patch series aims to provide a mechanism for handling this, and
>> to fix it for the PM Domain case:
>> 1. The first patch provides a mechanism to let the clock and/or PM
>> Domain subsystem or drivers handle this, by exporting the clock and
>> PM Domain dependencies for the serial port, as available in the
>> system's device tree,
>> 2. The second patch introduces a new flag to handle a PM domain that
>> must be kept powered-on during early boot, and by setting this flag
>> if the PM Domain contains the serial console (originally I handled
>> this inside rmobile-sysc, but it turned out to be easy to
>> generalize this to other platforms in the core PM Domain code).
>> 3. The third patch removes the no longer needed special console
>> handling from the R-Mobile SYSC PM Domain driver.
>>
>> I did not fix the similar clock issue, as it is more complex (there can
>> be multiple clocks, and each clock provider can have its own value of
>> #clock-cells), and I do not need it for Renesas ARM platforms.
>
> I will defer to Sarvana here, but ideally his series for the clock
> framework should solve this case too.
>
>>
>> This has been tested on the APE6-EVM, Armadillo-800-EVA, and KZM-A9-GT
>> development boards, with and without earlycon, including s2ram with and
>> without no_console_suspend.
>>
>> Notes:
>> - This should not be needed on RZ/G3S, where each serial port device
>> has its own PM Domain,
>> - drivers/clk/imx/clk.c and drivers/pmdomain/imx/scu-pd.c have special
>> handling for the of_stdout device, but is probably not affected, as
>> each serial port seems to share its PM Domain only with the serial
>> port's clock controller.
>>
>> Thanks for your comments!
>>
>> Geert Uytterhoeven (3):
>> earlycon: Export clock and PM Domain info from FDT
>> pmdomain: core: Avoid earlycon power-down
>> pmdomain: renesas: rmobile-sysc: Remove serial console handling
>>
>> drivers/pmdomain/core.c | 24 ++++++++++++++++--
>> drivers/pmdomain/renesas/rmobile-sysc.c | 33 +------------------------
>> drivers/tty/serial/earlycon.c | 14 ++++++++++-
>> include/linux/pm_domain.h | 4 +++
>> include/linux/serial_core.h | 10 ++++++++
>> 5 files changed, 50 insertions(+), 35 deletions(-)
>>
>> --
>
> Kind regards
> Uffe


2024-06-05 10:54:43

by Ulf Hansson

[permalink] [raw]
Subject: Re: [PATCH/RFC 0/3] pmdomain: renesas: rmobile-sysc: Remove serial console handling

On Wed, 5 Jun 2024 at 12:41, Tomi Valkeinen
<[email protected]> wrote:
>
> Hi Ulf,
>
> On 05/06/2024 12:34, Ulf Hansson wrote:
> > + Tomi
> >
> > On Mon, 27 May 2024 at 14:41, Geert Uytterhoeven
> > <[email protected]> wrote:
> >>
> >> Hi all,
> >>
> >> Since commit a47cf07f60dcb02d ("serial: core: Call
> >> device_set_awake_path() for console port"), the serial driver properly
> >> handles the case where the serial console is part of the awake path, and
> >> it looked like we could start removing special serial console handling
> >> from PM Domain drivers like the R-Mobile SYSC PM Domain driver.
> >> Unfortunately the devil is in the details, as usual...
> >>
> >> Earlycon relies on the serial port to be initialized by the firmware
> >> and/or bootloader. Linux is not aware of any hardware dependencies that
> >> must be met to keep the port working, and thus cannot guarantee they
> >> stay met, until the full serial driver takes over.
> >>
> >> E.g. all unused clocks and unused PM Domains are disabled in a late
> >> initcall. As this happens after the full serial driver has taken over,
> >> the serial port's clock and/or PM Domain are no longer deemed unused,
> >> and this is typically not a problem.
> >>
> >> However, if the serial port's clock or PM Domain is shared with another
> >> device, and that other device is runtime-suspended before the full
> >> serial driver has probed, the serial port's clock and/or PM Domain will
> >> be disabled inadvertently. Any subsequent serial console output will
> >> cause a crash or system lock-up. E.g. on R/SH-Mobile SoCs, the serial
> >> ports share their PM Domain with several other I/O devices. After the
> >> use of pwm (Armadillo-800-EVA) or i2c (KZM-A9-GT) during early boot,
> >> before the full serial driver takes over, the PM Domain containing the
> >> early serial port is powered down, causing a lock-up when booted with
> >> "earlycon".
> >
> > Hi Geert,
> >
> > Thanks for the detailed description of the problem! As pointed out in
> > regards to another similar recent patch [1], this is indeed a generic
> > problem, not limited to the serial console handling.
> >
> > At Linaro Connect a few weeks ago I followed up with Saravana from the
> > earlier discussions at LPC last fall. We now have a generic solution
> > for genpd drafted on plain paper, based on fw_devlink and the
> > ->sync_state() callback. I am currently working on the genpd series,
> > while Saravana will re-spin the series (can't find the link to the
> > last version) for the clock framework. Ideally, we want these things
> > to work in a very similar way.
> >
> > That said, allow me to post the series for genpd in a week or two to
> > see if it can solve your problem too, for the serial console.
>
> Both the genpd and the clock solutions will make suppliers depend on all
> their consumers to be probed, right?
>
> I think it is a solution, and should be worked on, but it has the
> drawback that suppliers that have consumers that will possibly never be
> probed, will also never be able to turn off unused resources.
>
> This was specifically the case with the TI ti-sci pmdomain case I was
> looking at: the genpd driver (ti_sci_pm_domains.c) provides a lot of
> genpds for totally unrelated devices, and so if, e.g., you don't have or
> don't want to load a driver for the GPU, all PDs are affected.
>
> Even here the solutions you mention will help: instead of things getting
> broken because genpds get turned off while they are actually in use, the
> genpds will be kept enabled, thus fixing the breakage. Unfortunately,
> they'll be kept enabled forever.
>
> I've been ill for quite a while so I haven't had the chance to look at
> this more, but before that I was hacking around a bit with something I
> named .partial_sync_state(). .sync_state() gets called when all the
> consumers have probed, but .partial_sync_state() gets called when _a_
> consumer has been probed.
>
> For the .sync_state() things are easy for the driver, as it knows
> everything related has been probed, but for .partial_sync_state() the
> driver needs to track resources internally. .partial_sync_state() will
> tell the driver that a consumer device has probed, the driver can then
> find out which specific resources (genpds in my case) that consumer
> refers to, and then... Well, that's how far I got with my hacks =).
>
> So, I don't know if this .partial_sync_state() can even work, but I
> think we do need something more on top of the .sync_state().

Thanks for the update!

You certainly have a point, but rather than implementing some platform
specific method, I think we should be able enforce the call to
->sync_state(), based upon some condition/timeout - and even if all
consumers haven't been probed.

[...]

Kind regards
Uffe

2024-06-05 11:17:08

by Tomi Valkeinen

[permalink] [raw]
Subject: Re: [PATCH/RFC 0/3] pmdomain: renesas: rmobile-sysc: Remove serial console handling

On 05/06/2024 13:53, Ulf Hansson wrote:
> On Wed, 5 Jun 2024 at 12:41, Tomi Valkeinen
> <[email protected]> wrote:
>>
>> Hi Ulf,
>>
>> On 05/06/2024 12:34, Ulf Hansson wrote:
>>> + Tomi
>>>
>>> On Mon, 27 May 2024 at 14:41, Geert Uytterhoeven
>>> <[email protected]> wrote:
>>>>
>>>> Hi all,
>>>>
>>>> Since commit a47cf07f60dcb02d ("serial: core: Call
>>>> device_set_awake_path() for console port"), the serial driver properly
>>>> handles the case where the serial console is part of the awake path, and
>>>> it looked like we could start removing special serial console handling
>>>> from PM Domain drivers like the R-Mobile SYSC PM Domain driver.
>>>> Unfortunately the devil is in the details, as usual...
>>>>
>>>> Earlycon relies on the serial port to be initialized by the firmware
>>>> and/or bootloader. Linux is not aware of any hardware dependencies that
>>>> must be met to keep the port working, and thus cannot guarantee they
>>>> stay met, until the full serial driver takes over.
>>>>
>>>> E.g. all unused clocks and unused PM Domains are disabled in a late
>>>> initcall. As this happens after the full serial driver has taken over,
>>>> the serial port's clock and/or PM Domain are no longer deemed unused,
>>>> and this is typically not a problem.
>>>>
>>>> However, if the serial port's clock or PM Domain is shared with another
>>>> device, and that other device is runtime-suspended before the full
>>>> serial driver has probed, the serial port's clock and/or PM Domain will
>>>> be disabled inadvertently. Any subsequent serial console output will
>>>> cause a crash or system lock-up. E.g. on R/SH-Mobile SoCs, the serial
>>>> ports share their PM Domain with several other I/O devices. After the
>>>> use of pwm (Armadillo-800-EVA) or i2c (KZM-A9-GT) during early boot,
>>>> before the full serial driver takes over, the PM Domain containing the
>>>> early serial port is powered down, causing a lock-up when booted with
>>>> "earlycon".
>>>
>>> Hi Geert,
>>>
>>> Thanks for the detailed description of the problem! As pointed out in
>>> regards to another similar recent patch [1], this is indeed a generic
>>> problem, not limited to the serial console handling.
>>>
>>> At Linaro Connect a few weeks ago I followed up with Saravana from the
>>> earlier discussions at LPC last fall. We now have a generic solution
>>> for genpd drafted on plain paper, based on fw_devlink and the
>>> ->sync_state() callback. I am currently working on the genpd series,
>>> while Saravana will re-spin the series (can't find the link to the
>>> last version) for the clock framework. Ideally, we want these things
>>> to work in a very similar way.
>>>
>>> That said, allow me to post the series for genpd in a week or two to
>>> see if it can solve your problem too, for the serial console.
>>
>> Both the genpd and the clock solutions will make suppliers depend on all
>> their consumers to be probed, right?
>>
>> I think it is a solution, and should be worked on, but it has the
>> drawback that suppliers that have consumers that will possibly never be
>> probed, will also never be able to turn off unused resources.
>>
>> This was specifically the case with the TI ti-sci pmdomain case I was
>> looking at: the genpd driver (ti_sci_pm_domains.c) provides a lot of
>> genpds for totally unrelated devices, and so if, e.g., you don't have or
>> don't want to load a driver for the GPU, all PDs are affected.
>>
>> Even here the solutions you mention will help: instead of things getting
>> broken because genpds get turned off while they are actually in use, the
>> genpds will be kept enabled, thus fixing the breakage. Unfortunately,
>> they'll be kept enabled forever.
>>
>> I've been ill for quite a while so I haven't had the chance to look at
>> this more, but before that I was hacking around a bit with something I
>> named .partial_sync_state(). .sync_state() gets called when all the
>> consumers have probed, but .partial_sync_state() gets called when _a_
>> consumer has been probed.
>>
>> For the .sync_state() things are easy for the driver, as it knows
>> everything related has been probed, but for .partial_sync_state() the
>> driver needs to track resources internally. .partial_sync_state() will
>> tell the driver that a consumer device has probed, the driver can then
>> find out which specific resources (genpds in my case) that consumer
>> refers to, and then... Well, that's how far I got with my hacks =).
>>
>> So, I don't know if this .partial_sync_state() can even work, but I
>> think we do need something more on top of the .sync_state().
>
> Thanks for the update!
>
> You certainly have a point, but rather than implementing some platform
> specific method, I think we should be able enforce the call to
> ->sync_state(), based upon some condition/timeout - and even if all
> consumers haven't been probed.

Hmm, I think that was already implemented in some of the serieses out
there (or even in mainline already?), as I remember doing some
experiments with it. I don't like it much, though.

With a simple timeout, it'll always be just a bit too early for some
user (nfs mount took a bit more time than expected -> board frozen).

The only condition I can see that would somewhat work is a manual
trigger from the userspace. The boot scripts could then signal the
kernel when all the modules have been loaded and probably a suitable,
platform/use case specific amount of time has passed to allow the
drivers to probe.

It just feels a bit too much of a "let's hope this work" approach.

That said, the timeout/condition is probably acceptable for many cases,
where turning off a resource forcefully will just result in, say, a
temporarily blanked display, or something else that gets fixed if and
when the proper driver is probed.

Unfortunately, here with the case I have, the whole board gets halted if
the display subsystem genpd is turned off and the display driver is
loaded after that.

Tomi


2024-06-12 14:20:33

by claudiu beznea

[permalink] [raw]
Subject: Re: [PATCH/RFC 0/3] pmdomain: renesas: rmobile-sysc: Remove serial console handling

Hi, Geert,

On 27.05.2024 15:41, Geert Uytterhoeven wrote:
> Hi all,
>
> Since commit a47cf07f60dcb02d ("serial: core: Call
> device_set_awake_path() for console port"), the serial driver properly
> handles the case where the serial console is part of the awake path, and
> it looked like we could start removing special serial console handling
> from PM Domain drivers like the R-Mobile SYSC PM Domain driver.
> Unfortunately the devil is in the details, as usual...
>
> Earlycon relies on the serial port to be initialized by the firmware
> and/or bootloader. Linux is not aware of any hardware dependencies that
> must be met to keep the port working, and thus cannot guarantee they
> stay met, until the full serial driver takes over.
>
> E.g. all unused clocks and unused PM Domains are disabled in a late
> initcall. As this happens after the full serial driver has taken over,
> the serial port's clock and/or PM Domain are no longer deemed unused,
> and this is typically not a problem.
>
> However, if the serial port's clock or PM Domain is shared with another
> device, and that other device is runtime-suspended before the full
> serial driver has probed, the serial port's clock and/or PM Domain will
> be disabled inadvertently. Any subsequent serial console output will
> cause a crash or system lock-up. E.g. on R/SH-Mobile SoCs, the serial
> ports share their PM Domain with several other I/O devices. After the
> use of pwm (Armadillo-800-EVA) or i2c (KZM-A9-GT) during early boot,
> before the full serial driver takes over, the PM Domain containing the
> early serial port is powered down, causing a lock-up when booted with
> "earlycon".
>
> This RFC patch series aims to provide a mechanism for handling this, and
> to fix it for the PM Domain case:
> 1. The first patch provides a mechanism to let the clock and/or PM
> Domain subsystem or drivers handle this, by exporting the clock and
> PM Domain dependencies for the serial port, as available in the
> system's device tree,
> 2. The second patch introduces a new flag to handle a PM domain that
> must be kept powered-on during early boot, and by setting this flag
> if the PM Domain contains the serial console (originally I handled
> this inside rmobile-sysc, but it turned out to be easy to
> generalize this to other platforms in the core PM Domain code).
> 3. The third patch removes the no longer needed special console
> handling from the R-Mobile SYSC PM Domain driver.
>
> I did not fix the similar clock issue, as it is more complex (there can
> be multiple clocks, and each clock provider can have its own value of
> #clock-cells), and I do not need it for Renesas ARM platforms.
>
> This has been tested on the APE6-EVM, Armadillo-800-EVA, and KZM-A9-GT
> development boards, with and without earlycon, including s2ram with and
> without no_console_suspend.
>
> Notes:
> - This should not be needed on RZ/G3S, where each serial port device
> has its own PM Domain,

For the record, I've tested this series on RZ/G3S. All good with it.
If any, you can add my:

Tested-by: Claudiu Beznea <[email protected]>

Thank you,
Claudiu Beznea

> - drivers/clk/imx/clk.c and drivers/pmdomain/imx/scu-pd.c have special
> handling for the of_stdout device, but is probably not affected, as
> each serial port seems to share its PM Domain only with the serial
> port's clock controller.
>
> Thanks for your comments!
>
> Geert Uytterhoeven (3):
> earlycon: Export clock and PM Domain info from FDT
> pmdomain: core: Avoid earlycon power-down
> pmdomain: renesas: rmobile-sysc: Remove serial console handling
>
> drivers/pmdomain/core.c | 24 ++++++++++++++++--
> drivers/pmdomain/renesas/rmobile-sysc.c | 33 +------------------------
> drivers/tty/serial/earlycon.c | 14 ++++++++++-
> include/linux/pm_domain.h | 4 +++
> include/linux/serial_core.h | 10 ++++++++
> 5 files changed, 50 insertions(+), 35 deletions(-)
>