On 7/2/21 11:23 AM, Raphael Gallais-Pou wrote:
Hello Marek,

Hi,

Sorry for the late answer.

No worries, take your time

On 6/30/21 2:35 AM, Marek Vasut wrote:
On 6/29/21 1:58 PM, Raphael GALLAIS-POU - foss wrote:

[...]

+++ b/drivers/gpu/drm/stm/ltdc.c
@@ -425,10 +425,17 @@ static void ltdc_crtc_atomic_enable(struct drm_crtc *crtc,
  {
      struct ltdc_device *ldev = crtc_to_ltdc(crtc);
      struct drm_device *ddev = crtc->dev;
+    int ret;
        DRM_DEBUG_DRIVER("\n");
  -    pm_runtime_get_sync(ddev->dev);
+    if (!pm_runtime_active(ddev->dev)) {
+        ret = pm_runtime_get_sync(ddev->dev);

All these if (!pm_runtime_active()) then pm_runtime_get_sync() calls look like workaround for some larger issue. Shouldn't the pm_runtime do some refcounting on its own , so this shouldn't be needed ?


This problem purely comes from the driver internals, so I don't think it is a workaround.

Because of the "ltdc_crtc_mode_set_nofb" function which does not have any "symmetrical" call, such as enable/disable functions, there was two calls to pm_runtime_get_sync against one call to pm_runtime_put_sync.

This instability resulted in the LTDC clocks being always enabled, even when the peripheral was disabled. This could be seen in the clk_summary as explained in the patch summary among other things.

By doing so, we first check if the clocks are not already activated, and in that case we call pm_runtime_get_sync.

I just have to wonder, how come other drivers don't need these if (!pm_runtime_active()) pm_runtime_get_sync() conditions. I think they just get/put the runtime PM within a call itself, not across function calls. Maybe that could be the right fix here too ?

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