On Tue, 25 Aug 2015, Michael Turquette wrote: > Quoting Maxime Ripard (2015-08-20 08:15:10) > > On Tue, Aug 18, 2015 at 09:43:56AM -0700, Michael Turquette wrote: > > > Quoting Maxime Ripard (2015-08-18 08:45:52) > > > > Hi Mike, > > > > > > > > On Fri, Aug 07, 2015 at 12:09:27PM -0700, Michael Turquette wrote: > > > > > All of the other kitchen sink stuff (DT binding, passing the flag back > > > > > to the framework when the clock consumer driver calls clk_put) was > > > > > left > > > > > out because I do not see a real use case for it. If one can > > > > > demonstrate > > > > > a real use case (and not a hypothetical one) then this patch series > > > > > can > > > > > be expanded further. > > > > > > > > I think there is a very trivial use case for passing back the > > > > reference to the framework, if during the probed, we have something > > > > like: > > > > > > > > clk = clk_get() > > > > clk_prepare_enable(clk) > > > > foo_framework_register() > > > > > > > > if foo_framework_register fails, the sensible thing to do would be to > > > > call clk_disable_unprepare. If the clock was a critical clock, you > > > > just gated it. > > > > > > Hmm, a good point. Creating the "pass the reference back" call is not > > > hard technically. But how to keep from abusing it? E.g. I do not want > > > that call to become an alternative to correct use of clk_enable. > > > > > > Maybe I'll need a Coccinelle script or just some regular sed to > > > occasionally search for new users of this api and audit them? > > > > > > I was hoping to not add any new consumer api at all :-/ > > > > I don't think there's any abuse that can be done with the current API, > > nor do I think you need to have new functions either. > > > > If the clock is critical, when the customer calls > > clk_unprepare_disable on it, simply take back the reference you gave > > in the framework, and you're done. Or am I missing something? > > Maybe I am the one missing something? My goal was to allow the consumer > driver to gate the critical clock. So we need clk_disable_unused to > actually disable the clock for that to work. > > I think you are suggesting that clk_disable_unused should *not* disable > the clock if it is critical. Can you confirm that?
My take is that a critical clock should only be disabled when a knowledgeable driver wants to gate it for a specific purpose [probably using clk_disable()]. Once the aforementioned driver no longer has a use for the clock [whether that happens with clk_unprepare_disable() or clk_put() ...] the clock should be ungated and be provided with critical status once more. -- Lee Jones Linaro STMicroelectronics Landing Team Lead Linaro.org │ Open source software for ARM SoCs Follow Linaro: Facebook | Twitter | Blog -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-kernel" in the body of a message to majord...@vger.kernel.org More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html Please read the FAQ at http://www.tux.org/lkml/