Return-Path: Received: (majordomo@vger.kernel.org) by vger.kernel.org via listexpand id S1751268Ab3CUSag (ORCPT ); Thu, 21 Mar 2013 14:30:36 -0400 Received: from mailhost.informatik.uni-hamburg.de ([134.100.9.70]:43327 "EHLO mailhost.informatik.uni-hamburg.de" rhost-flags-OK-OK-OK-OK) by vger.kernel.org with ESMTP id S1750698Ab3CUSaf (ORCPT ); Thu, 21 Mar 2013 14:30:35 -0400 Message-ID: <514B5254.50101@metafoo.de> Date: Thu, 21 Mar 2013 19:32:52 +0100 From: Lars-Peter Clausen User-Agent: Mozilla/5.0 (X11; U; Linux x86_64; en-US; rv:1.9.1.16) Gecko/20121215 Icedove/3.0.11 MIME-Version: 1.0 To: =?UTF-8?B?U8O2cmVuIEJyaW5rbWFubg==?= CC: Mike Turquette , Josh Cartwright , Michal Simek , Peter Crosthwaite , Prashant Gaikwad , devicetree-discuss@lists.ozlabs.org, linux-kernel@vger.kernel.org, linux-arm-kernel@lists.infradead.org, git@xilinx.com, =?UTF-8?B?SmFuIEzDvA==?= =?UTF-8?B?YmJl?= , Sascha Hauer , Stephen Warren , Peter De Schrijver Subject: Re: RFC v2: Zynq Clock Controller References: <27dae808-1d3a-4001-8eb2-b0a6e2a34b8f@AM1EHSMHS013.ehs.local> In-Reply-To: <27dae808-1d3a-4001-8eb2-b0a6e2a34b8f@AM1EHSMHS013.ehs.local> X-Enigmail-Version: 1.0.1 Content-Type: text/plain; charset=UTF-8 Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8bit Sender: linux-kernel-owner@vger.kernel.org List-ID: X-Mailing-List: linux-kernel@vger.kernel.org Content-Length: 6999 Lines: 103 On 03/21/2013 12:56 AM, Sören Brinkmann wrote: > Hi, > > I spent some time working on this and incorporating feedback. Here's an updated proposal for a clock controller for Zynq: > > Required properties: > - #clock-cells : Must be 1 > - compatible : "xlnx,ps7-clkc" (this may become 'xlnx,zynq-clkc' terminology differs a bit between Xilinx internal and mainline) > - ps-clk-frequency : Frequency of the oscillator providing ps_clk in HZ > (usually 33 MHz oscillators are used for Zynq platforms) > - clock-output-names : List of strings used to name the clock outputs. Shall be a list of the outputs given below. > > Optional properties: > - clocks : as described in the clock bindings > - clock-names : as described in the clock bindings > > Clock inputs: > The following strings are optional parameters to the 'clock-names' property in > order to provide optional (E)MIO clock sources. > - swdt_ext_clk > - gem0_emio_clk > - gem1_emio_clk > - mio_clk_XX # with XX = 00..53 > > Example: > clkc: clkc { > #clock-cells = <1>; > compatible = "xlnx,ps7-clkc"; > ps-clk-frequency = <33333333>; The input frequency should be a clock as well. > clock-output-names = "armpll", "ddrpll", "iopll", "cpu_6or4x", "cpu_3or2x", "cpu_2x", "cpu_1x", "ddr2x", "ddr3x", "dci", "lqspi", "smc", "pcap", "gem0", "gem1", "fclk0", "fclk1", "fclk2", "fclk3", "can0", "can1", "sdio0", "sdio1", "uart0", "uart1", "spi0", "spi1", "dma", "usb0_aper", "usb1_aper", "gem0_aper", "gem1_aper", "sdio0_aper", "sdio1_aper", "spi0_aper", "spi1_aper", "can0_aper", "can1_aper", "i2c0_aper", "i2c1_aper", "uart0_aper", "uart1_aper", "gpio_aper", "lqspi_aper", "smc_aper", "swdt", "dbg_trc", "dbg_apb"; /* long list... explanation below */ > /* optional props */ > clocks = <&clkc 16>, <&clk_foo>; > clock-names = "gem1_emio_clk", "can_mio_clk_23"; > }; > > With this revised bindings arbitrary upstream and downstream clock providers should be supported and it's also possible to loop back an output as input. The downside of supporting this is, that I don't see a way around explicitly listing the clock output names in the DT. > The reason for this is, that a downstream clock provider should use of_clk_get_parent_name() to obtain its parent clock name. For a block with multiple outputs of_clk_get_parent_name() can return a valid clock name only when 'clock-output-names' is present. > Probably the fclks are the only realistic use case to become parent of downstream clock providers, but I could imagine that e.g. a device driver like UART wants to use the CCF to model its internal clocks, hence it would require its parent clock name. Even though a device driver could use clk_get_parent() and __clk_get_name(), of_clk_get_parent_name() should probably work as well. I simply have a bad feeling about breaking of_clk_get_parent_name() for any clock. > But after all, I'm open for finding a better solution for this. > > > Similar, inputs for optional clock sources through (E)MIO pins can be defined as described in the clock bindings using the 'clocks' and 'clock-names' properties, with 'clock-names' being an arbitrary subset of the documented names. The actual parent clock names are internally resolved using of_clk_get_parent_name(). > > > Regarding this monolithic solution versus a finer granular split: > > On cost of more complex probing we would also have: > - one clock driver covering the peripheral clocks > - one for the CPU clock domain > - one for the DDR clock domain > - one for GEM > - one for CAN > - one for the APER clks > - one for the PLLs > - one for fclks fclks are the same as peripheral clocks except for the gate bit, as far as I can see. > - probably one for the debug clocks (not sure whether we need those) > > Except for the peripheral one and probably the fclk, they would all be instantiated just once. So, there is not a lot of reuse going on. PLLs are going to be instantiated multiple times as well. > Fclks I would probably also rather put into one driver with four outputs instead of instantiating a single output driver multiple times. Same for PLLs. > > And then there is e.g. a mux for the system watchdog input which doesn't really fit anywhere and it would be pretty much ridiculous to have another clock driver just for that one and it would also become "hidden" in one of the others. > > In my opinion that's just not necessary. We would create a bunch of clock drivers including DT bindings for them, probing would become more complex and it doesn't really help with the probe/naming issue. So, I don't think it's beneficial to go down that road. > > The monolithic solution would need one custom driver for the PLLs, DT bindings wouldn't be required for it though. Everything else should be internally described using the clock-primitives. > > Other than having a much simpler probe and init process, I still think it might be beneficial to have this monolithic block with a holistic view of the clock tree. For suspend e.g. I think the clock controller could export functions like zynq_clkc_(suspend|resume) and then the controller handles the PLL bypassing/shutdown. > Regarding full dynamic reparenting, I don't know how exactly that could work, but with the clock controller there is at least a block where that intelligence would be going and which has knowledge of all the 'struct clk *' required to reparent clocks. > > Regarding the DT description, it is probably controversial what is considered better. I, like the Tegra folks, think having one clock controller in there is fine and hides irrelevant implementation details. > I still don't like the monolithic solution. From my point of view it is architecturally inferior, it is a bad abstraction. You argue that for a non-monolithic version you'd have to implement a clock driver for each different type of clock. But you still have to do this for the monolithic version, they'd probably just end up in one huge messy file. Unless you are going to duplicate huge amounts of lines you'd probably have functions like add_gem_clk, add_peripheral_clk, add_pll_clk and so on in your monolithic drivers. The SLCR is a virtual construct, which groups the clock units together. But the clock units are the actual entities. E.g. imagine a Zync 2.0, it would probably reuse the same clock units, but there would quite likely be different clocks mapped at different addresses. If you choose a non-monolithic implementation you'd just have to update your devicetree to make this work, with a monolithic version you'd have to add a almost identical driver for the v2. - Lars -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-kernel" in the body of a message to majordomo@vger.kernel.org More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html Please read the FAQ at http://www.tux.org/lkml/