On Thu, Nov 07, 2019 at 11:19:32AM -0800, Stephen Boyd wrote: > Quoting Thierry Reding (2019-11-07 07:21:15) > > On Thu, Nov 07, 2019 at 03:54:03AM +0300, Dmitry Osipenko wrote: > > > 07.11.2019 02:10, Stephen Boyd пишет: > > > > Quoting Sowjanya Komatineni (2019-08-16 12:41:52) > > > >> This patch adds an API clk_hw_get_parent_index to get index of the > > > >> clock parent to use during the clock restore operations on system > > > >> resume. > > > > > > > > Is there a reason we can't save the clk hw index at suspend time by > > > > reading the hardware to understand the current parent? The parent index > > > > typically doesn't matter unless we're trying to communicate something > > > > from the framework to the provider driver. Put another way, I would > > > > think the provider driver can figure out the index itself without having > > > > to go through the framework to do so. > > > > > > Isn't it a bit wasteful to duplicate information about the parent within > > > a provider if framework already has that info? The whole point of this > > > new API is to allow providers to avoid that unnecessary duplication. > > > > > > Please note that clk_hw_get_parent_index is getting used only at the > > > resume time and not at suspend. > > > > I agree with this. All of the information that we need is already cached > > in the framework. Doing this in the driver would mean essentially adding > > a "saved parent" field along with code to read the value at suspend time > > to the three types of clocks that currently use this core helper. > > Don't we already have a "saved parent" field by storing the pointer to > the clk_hw? > > > > > That's certainly something that we *can* do, but it doesn't sound like a > > better option than simply querying the framework for the value that we > > need. > > > > Let me say this another way. Why does this driver want to know the index > that the framework uses for some clk_hw pointer? Perhaps it happens to > align with the same value that hardware uses, but I still don't > understand why the driver wants to know what the framework has decided > is the index for some clk_hw pointer. > > Or is this something like "give me the index for the parent that the > framework thinks I currently have but in reality don't have anymore > because the register contents were wiped and we need to reparent it"? Yeah, that's exactly what this is being used for. It's used to restore the parent/child relationship during resume after the registers have been wiped during supend. > A generic API to get any index for this question is overkill and we should > consider adding some sort of API like clk_hw_get_current_parent_index(), > or a framework flag that tells the framework this parent is incorrect > and we need to call the .set_parent() op again to reconfigure it. Okay, I think I see what you're saying. The current implementation does carry a bit of a risk because users could be calling this function with any arbitrary pair of struct clk_hw *, even completely unrelated ones. How about we turn it into this instead: /** * clk_hw_get_parent_index - return the index of the parent clock * @hw: clk_hw associated with the clk being consumed * * Fetches and returns the index of parent clock. Returns -EINVAL if the given * clock does not have a current parent. */ int clk_hw_get_parent_index(struct clk_hw *hw) { struct clk_hw *parent = clk_hw_get_parent(hw); if (!parent) return -EINVAL; return clk_fetch_parent_index(hw->core, parent->core); } EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL(clk_hw_get_parent_index); I think that has the advantage that we can't pass it a parent that's not really a parent. There's still the slightly weird case where the clock doesn't have a current parent, but hopefully that's something we are not going to encounter much. After all this only makes sense to be called on mux clocks and they always do have a parent by definition. Perhaps we should be more explicit and wrap that !parent conditional in a WARN_ON()? In my local patches I do that at the call sites because they are all functions returning void, so we'd be silently ignoring the cases, but I think it may make sense to have it in the core. Any thoughts? Thierry