[PATCH 1/2] PM / Domains: Add OF support

Rafael J. Wysocki rjw at sisk.pl
Thu Dec 29 09:17:54 EST 2011


On Wednesday, December 28, 2011, Thomas Abraham wrote:
> Hi Mark, Rafael,

Hi,

> On 27 December 2011 02:14, Rafael J. Wysocki <rjw at sisk.pl> wrote:
> > On Monday, December 26, 2011, Mark Brown wrote:
> >> On Mon, Dec 26, 2011 at 08:13:19PM +0100, Rafael J. Wysocki wrote:
> >> > On Monday, December 12, 2011, Thomas Abraham wrote:
> >>
> >> > > A device node pointer is added to generic pm domain structure to associate
> >> > > the domain with a node in the device tree.
> >>
> >> > That sounds fine except for one thing: PM domains are not devices, so adding
> >> > "device node" pointers to them is kind of confusing.  Perhaps there should be
> >> > something like struct dt_node, representing a more general device tree node?
> >>
> >> There's struct of_node which is exactly that, though practically
> >> speaking you need a device if you're going to bind automatically to
> >> something from the device tree in a sensible fashion and there is actual
> >> hardware under there so a device does make some sense.
> 
> In patch 2/2 of this series, the platform code looks for nodes in
> device tree that represent a power domain. When a power domain node is
> found, a generic power domain is instantiated with pm_genpd_init()
> using the information available from the node in device tree. There is
> no automatic binding required in this case. The power domain node does
> represent a hardware that manages the power domain.

Good.  So would it be possible to use struct of_node instead of
struct device_node in struct generic_pm_domain?

> >>
> >> This is in part compatibility with the existing Exynos code which uses
> >> devices to probe the domains for non-DT systems.
> >
> > Well, that's not a general case, though.
> >
> > It doesn't feel approporiate to use a "device node" pointer for something
> > that's not based on struct device, at least not a generic level, so I wonder
> > if there's a different way.
> 
> A device node pointer or of_node pointer is a simple pointer to a
> instance of a node in device tree. All nodes in a device tree need not
> represent a corresponding 'struct device'. A node in device tree can
> described a hardware feature such as a power domain supported in the
> hardware.

Sure.

> The addition of device tree support for generic power domains in this
> patchset is generic for all platforms. The platform code instantiates
> generic power domains from device tree with the of_node pointer
> assigned to 'struct generic_pm_domain'. Then, in
> __pm_genpd_add_device(), given a of_node pointer (to gen_pd), it is
> possible to find a matching power domain to select.

My point was that adding the struct device_node pointer to
struct generic_pm_domain didn't look good, because that structure didn't
represent a device in general.  While I understand that it may be regarded
as a "device object" on some platforms, there are platforms that don't
regard PM domains as devices.  For this reason (and only for this reason)
it appears to be more appropriate to use a more generic device tree node
type for struct generic_pm_domain.

Thanks,
Rafael


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