On Tue, 2019-05-21 at 23:43 +0200, Stefan Wahren wrote: > > Nicolas Saenz Julienne hat am 21. Mai 2019 um 17:47 > > geschrieben: > > > > > > Hi Stefan, thanks for your comments! > > > > On Tue, 2019-05-21 at 14:40 +0200, Stefan Wahren wrote: > > > Hi Nicolas, > > > > > > On 20.05.19 14:11, Stefan Wahren wrote: > > > > Hi Nicolas, > > > > > > > > the following comments applies only in case Eric is fine with the whole > > > > approach. > > > > > > > > On 20.05.19 12:47, Nicolas Saenz Julienne wrote: > > > > > Raspberry Pi's firmware, which runs in a dedicated processor, keeps > > > > maybe we should clarify that the firmware is running in the VPU > > > > > track of the board's temperature and voltage. It's resposible for > > > > > scaling the CPU frequency whenever it deems the device reached an > > > > > unsafe > > > > > state. On top of that the firmware provides an interface which allows > > > > > Linux to to query the clock's state or change it's frequency. > > > > I think this requires a separate update of the devicetree binding. > > > > > Being the sole user of the bcm2835 clock driver, this integrates the > > > > > firmware interface into the clock driver and adds a first user: the > > > > > CPU > > > > > pll, also known as 'pllb'. > > > > Please verify that the kernel still works (and this clock driver probe) > > > > under the following conditions: > > > > > > > > - CONFIG_RASPBERRYPI_FIRMWARE=n > > > > - CONFIG_RASPBERRYPI_FIRMWARE=m > > > > - older DTBs without patch #1 > > > i thought about this and the case this driver would return > > > -EPROBE_DEFER. The clock driver is too essential for doing such a thing. > > > So i think the best solution would be to move these changes into a > > > separate driver which should be register by the clock driver (similiar > > > to vchiq). This also avoid the need of a new device tree binding. > > > > I understand your concerns. > > > > Wouldn't you prefer registering the device trough the device tree? I'd go > > with > > the same approach as the firmware touchscreen driver, which is registered > > after > > the firmware's probe trough dt's 'simple-bus'. That said, it's not a > > strongly > > held opinion, I'm happy with whatever solution as long as it works. > > A devicetree binding always introduce some kind of inflexibility. In case > someone finds a better solution later things can get really messy. A recent > example is the clock handling for i2c-bcm2835. Fair enough. > > I get from your comments that you'd like the register based version of > > 'pllb' > > and 'pllb_arm' to be loaded if for some reason the firmware isn't available. > > Is > > that right? > > This wasn't my intention. I would prefer a simple approch here (no handover). > > > The main problem I see with this is the duplication of 'pllb' and > > 'pllb_arm'. Both drivers will create the same clock device through different > > interfaces. Any suggestions on how to deal with that? If not I can simply > > remove 'pllb' and 'pllb_arm' from clk-bcm2835.c. > > Yes. So even if this driver is disabled, there shouldn't be a regression. Or > did i miss something? No, there shoudn't be any regressions as these clocks are not being used at the moment. I'll send a follow-up series soon :) Regrads, Nicolas