09.08.2019 2:46, Sowjanya Komatineni пишет:
> This patch adds support for clk: tegra210: suspend-resume.
> 
> All the CAR controller settings are lost on suspend when core
> power goes off.
> 
> This patch has implementation for saving and restoring all PLLs
> and clocks context during system suspend and resume to have the
> clocks back to same state for normal operation.
> 
> Clock driver suspend and resume are registered as syscore_ops as clocks
> restore need to happen before the other drivers resume to have all their
> clocks back to the same state as before suspend.
> 
> Signed-off-by: Sowjanya Komatineni <[email protected]>
> ---
>  drivers/clk/tegra/clk-tegra210.c | 103 
> +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++--
>  drivers/clk/tegra/clk.c          |  64 ++++++++++++++++++++++++
>  drivers/clk/tegra/clk.h          |   3 ++
>  3 files changed, 166 insertions(+), 4 deletions(-)
> 
> diff --git a/drivers/clk/tegra/clk-tegra210.c 
> b/drivers/clk/tegra/clk-tegra210.c
> index 998bf60b219a..8dd6f4f4debb 100644
> --- a/drivers/clk/tegra/clk-tegra210.c
> +++ b/drivers/clk/tegra/clk-tegra210.c
> @@ -9,13 +9,13 @@
>  #include <linux/clkdev.h>
>  #include <linux/of.h>
>  #include <linux/of_address.h>
> +#include <linux/syscore_ops.h>
>  #include <linux/delay.h>
>  #include <linux/export.h>
>  #include <linux/mutex.h>
>  #include <linux/clk/tegra.h>
>  #include <dt-bindings/clock/tegra210-car.h>
>  #include <dt-bindings/reset/tegra210-car.h>
> -#include <linux/iopoll.h>
>  #include <linux/sizes.h>
>  #include <soc/tegra/pmc.h>
>  
> @@ -220,11 +220,15 @@
>  #define CLK_M_DIVISOR_SHIFT 2
>  #define CLK_M_DIVISOR_MASK 0x3
>  
> +#define CLK_MASK_ARM 0x44
> +#define MISC_CLK_ENB 0x48
> +
>  #define RST_DFLL_DVCO 0x2f4
>  #define DVFS_DFLL_RESET_SHIFT 0
>  
>  #define CLK_RST_CONTROLLER_RST_DEV_Y_SET 0x2a8
>  #define CLK_RST_CONTROLLER_RST_DEV_Y_CLR 0x2ac
> +#define CPU_SOFTRST_CTRL 0x380
>  
>  #define LVL2_CLK_GATE_OVRA 0xf8
>  #define LVL2_CLK_GATE_OVRC 0x3a0
> @@ -2825,6 +2829,7 @@ static int tegra210_enable_pllu(void)
>       struct tegra_clk_pll_freq_table *fentry;
>       struct tegra_clk_pll pllu;
>       u32 reg;
> +     int ret;
>  
>       for (fentry = pll_u_freq_table; fentry->input_rate; fentry++) {
>               if (fentry->input_rate == pll_ref_freq)
> @@ -2853,9 +2858,14 @@ static int tegra210_enable_pllu(void)
>       reg |= PLL_ENABLE;
>       writel(reg, clk_base + PLLU_BASE);
>  
> -     readl_relaxed_poll_timeout_atomic(clk_base + PLLU_BASE, reg,
> -                                       reg & PLL_BASE_LOCK, 2, 1000);
> -     if (!(reg & PLL_BASE_LOCK)) {
> +     /*
> +      * During clocks resume, same PLLU init and enable sequence get
> +      * executed. So, readx_poll_timeout_atomic can't be used here as it
> +      * uses ktime_get() and timekeeping resume doesn't happen by that
> +      * time. So, using tegra210_wait_for_mask for PLL LOCK.
> +      */
> +     ret = tegra210_wait_for_mask(&pllu, PLLU_BASE, PLL_BASE_LOCK);
> +     if (ret) {
>               pr_err("Timed out waiting for PLL_U to lock\n");
>               return -ETIMEDOUT;
>       }
> @@ -3288,6 +3298,84 @@ static void tegra210_disable_cpu_clock(u32 cpu)
>  }
>  
>  #ifdef CONFIG_PM_SLEEP
> +/*
> + * This array lists mask values for each peripheral clk bank
> + * to mask out reserved bits during the clocks state restore
> + * on SC7 resume to prevent accidental writes to these reserved
> + * bits.
> + */
> +static u32 periph_clk_rsvd_mask[TEGRA210_CAR_BANK_COUNT] = {

Should be more natural to have a "valid_mask" instead of "rsvd_mask".

What's actually wrong with touching of the reserved bits? They must be NO-OP.. 
or the
reserved bits are actually some kind of "secret" bits? If those bits have some 
use-case
outside of Silicon HW (like FPGA simulation), then this doesn't matter for 
upstream and you
have to keep the workaround locally in the downstream kernel or whatever.

> +     0x23282006,
> +     0x782e0c18,
> +     0x0c012c05,
> +     0x003e7304,
> +     0x86c04800,
> +     0xc0199000,
> +     0x03e03800,
> +};
> +
> +#define car_readl(_base, _off) readl_relaxed(clk_base + (_base) + ((_off) * 
> 4))
> +#define car_writel(_val, _base, _off) \
> +             writel_relaxed(_val, clk_base + (_base) + ((_off) * 4))
> +
> +static u32 spare_reg_ctx, misc_clk_enb_ctx, clk_msk_arm_ctx;
> +static u32 cpu_softrst_ctx[3];
> +
> +static int tegra210_clk_suspend(void)
> +{
> +     unsigned int i;
> +
> +     clk_save_context();
> +
> +     /*
> +      * Save the bootloader configured clock registers SPARE_REG0,
> +      * MISC_CLK_ENB, CLK_MASK_ARM, CPU_SOFTRST_CTRL.
> +      */
> +     spare_reg_ctx = readl_relaxed(clk_base + SPARE_REG0);
> +     misc_clk_enb_ctx = readl_relaxed(clk_base + MISC_CLK_ENB);
> +     clk_msk_arm_ctx = readl_relaxed(clk_base + CLK_MASK_ARM);
> +
> +     for (i = 0; i < ARRAY_SIZE(cpu_softrst_ctx); i++)
> +             cpu_softrst_ctx[i] = car_readl(CPU_SOFTRST_CTRL, i);
> +
> +     tegra_clk_periph_suspend();
> +     return 0;
> +}
> +
> +static void tegra210_clk_resume(void)
> +{
> +     unsigned int i;
> +
> +     tegra_clk_osc_resume(clk_base);
> +
> +     /*
> +      * Restore the bootloader configured clock registers SPARE_REG0,
> +      * MISC_CLK_ENB, CLK_MASK_ARM, CPU_SOFTRST_CTRL from saved context.
> +      */
> +     writel_relaxed(spare_reg_ctx, clk_base + SPARE_REG0);
> +     writel_relaxed(misc_clk_enb_ctx, clk_base + MISC_CLK_ENB);
> +     writel_relaxed(clk_msk_arm_ctx, clk_base + CLK_MASK_ARM);
> +
> +     for (i = 0; i < ARRAY_SIZE(cpu_softrst_ctx); i++)
> +             car_writel(cpu_softrst_ctx[i], CPU_SOFTRST_CTRL, i);
> +
> +     fence_udelay(5, clk_base);
> +
> +     /* enable all the clocks before changing the clock sources */
> +     tegra_clk_periph_force_on(periph_clk_rsvd_mask);

Why clocks need to be enabled before changing the sources?

> +     /* wait for all writes to happen to have all the clocks enabled */
> +     wmb();

fence_udelay() has exactly the same barrier at the very beginning of readl(), 
no need to
duplicate it here.

> +     fence_udelay(2, clk_base);
> +
> +     /* restore PLLs and all peripheral clock rates */
> +     tegra210_init_pllu();

Why USB PLL need to be restored at first?

> +     clk_restore_context();
> +
> +     /* restore all peripheral clocks enable and reset state */
> +     tegra_clk_periph_resume();
> +}

[snip]

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