[PATCHv9 1/3] Runtime Interpreted Power Sequences
Tomi Valkeinen
tomi.valkeinen at ti.com
Wed Nov 21 19:13:47 EST 2012
On 2012-11-21 03:56, Alex Courbot wrote:
> Hi Tomi,
>
> On Tuesday 20 November 2012 22:48:18 Tomi Valkeinen wrote:
>> I guess there's a reason, but the above looks a bit inconsistent. For
>> gpio you define the gpio resource inside the step. For power and pwm the
>> resource is defined before the steps. Why wouldn't "pwm = <&pwm 2
>> 5000000>;" work in step2?
>
> That's mostly a framework issue. Most frameworks do not export a function that
> allow to dereference a phandle - they expect resources to be declared right
> under the device node and accessed by name through foo_get(device, name). So
> using phandles in power sequences would require to export these additional
Right, I expected something like that.
> functions and also opens the door to some inconsistencies - for instance, your
> PWM phandle could be referenced a second time in the sequence with a different
> period - how do you know that these are actually referring the same PWM
> device?
This I didn't understand. Doesn't "<&pwm 2 xyz>" point to a single
device, no matter where and how many times it's used?
>>> +When a power sequence is run, its steps is executed one after the other
>>> until +one step fails or the end of the sequence is reached.
>>
>> The document doesn't give any hint of what the driver should do if
>> running the power sequence fails. Run the "opposite" power sequence?
>> Will that work for all resources? I'm mainly thinking of a case where
>> each enable of the resource should be matched by a disable, i.e. you
>> can't call disable if no enable was called.
>
> We discussed that issue already (around v5 I think) and the conclusion was
> that it should be up to the driver. When we simply enable/disable resources it
> is easy to revert, but in the future non-boolean properties will likely be
> introduced, and these cannot easily be reverted. Moreover some drivers might
> have more complex recovery needs. This deserves more discussion I think, as
> I'd like to have some "generic" recovery mechanism that covers most of the
> cases.
Ok. I'll need to dig up the conversation. Did you consider any examples
of how some driver could handle the error cases?
What I'm worried about is that, as far as I understand, the power
sequence is kinda like black box to the driver. The driver just does
"power-up", without knowing what really goes on in there.
And if it doesn't know what goes on in there, nor what's in "power-down"
sequence, how can it do anything when an error happens? The only option
I see is that the driver doesn't do anything, which will leave some
resources enabled, or it can run the power-down sequence, which may or
may not work.
Tomi
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