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

Rafael J. Wysocki rjw at sisk.pl
Wed Jan 4 09:30:58 EST 2012


On Monday, January 02, 2012, Thomas Abraham wrote:
> Hi Rafael,
> 
> On 29 December 2011 03:47, Rafael J. Wysocki <rjw at sisk.pl> wrote:
> > 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?
> 
> Sorry, I used 'struct of_node' and 'struct device_node'
> interchangeably in my reply. All the nodes in a device tree are
> represented by 'struct device_node'.
> 
> >
> >> >>
> >> >> 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.
> 
> If a platform uses some hardware controls (register read/writes) to
> enable/disable/control power domain, then it can be represented in the
> device tree. But such a node need not represent a 'struct device'.
> Other nodes in the device tree can then reference the power domain
> node.
> 
> If a platform does not have any hardware knobs for controlling power
> domains, then probably it will not be represented in the device tree.
> But I am not sure of this case.
> 
> The 'struct device_node' is a representation of a instance of a device
> tree node. It can represent nodes that are not devices. Hence, it can
> be used to represent a power domain in a device tree and also included
> in the 'struct generic_pm_domain'.

OK, so please address my second comment regarding the $subject patch,
i.e. that you might add a wrapper around the original
__pm_genpd_add_device() instead of modifying __pm_genpd_add_device()
itself.

Thanks,
Rafael


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