Message ID | cover.1523673467.git.collinsd@codeaurora.org |
---|---|
Headers | show |
Series | regulator: add QCOM RPMh regulator driver | expand |
Hi, On Fri, Apr 13, 2018 at 7:50 PM, David Collins <collinsd@codeaurora.org> wrote: > +#define RPMH_REGULATOR_DISABLE 0x0 > +#define RPMH_REGULATOR_ENABLE 0x1 In the last version Stephen said he didn't like the above two #defines and you said you'd remove them, yet they are still here. Explanation? > + * @drms_mode: Array of regulator framework modes which can > + * be configured dynamically for this regulator > + * via the set_load() callback. Using the singular for something that is an array is confusing. Why not "drms_modes" or "drms_mode_arr"? In the past review you said 'Perhaps something along the lines of "drms_modes"'. > +struct rpmh_vreg { > + struct rpmh_client *rpmh_client; > + u32 addr; > + struct regulator_desc rdesc; > + const struct rpmh_vreg_hw_data *hw_data; > + enum rpmh_regulator_type regulator_type; > + bool always_wait_for_ack; > + unsigned int *drms_mode; > + int *drms_mode_max_uA; > + size_t drms_mode_count; > + > + bool enabled; > + int voltage_selector; > + unsigned int mode; > + bool bypassed; nit: stick next to "enabled" to make slightly better structure packing... > +static int rpmh_regulator_vrm_set_voltage_sel(struct regulator_dev *rdev, > + unsigned int selector) > +{ > + struct rpmh_vreg *vreg = rdev_get_drvdata(rdev); > + struct tcs_cmd cmd = { > + .addr = vreg->addr + RPMH_REGULATOR_REG_VRM_VOLTAGE, > + }; > + int ret; > + > + /* VRM voltage control register is set with voltage in millivolts. */ > + cmd.data = DIV_ROUND_UP(regulator_list_voltage_linear_range(rdev, > + selector), 1000); > + > + ret = rpmh_regulator_send_request(vreg, &cmd, 1, > + selector > vreg->voltage_selector); If you init vreg->voltage_selector to an error as I suggest in rpmh_regulator_load_default_parameters() you'll need to handle it here. See below. > +static int rpmh_regulator_vrm_set_mode_bypass(struct rpmh_vreg *vreg, > + unsigned int mode, bool bypassed) > +{ > + struct tcs_cmd cmd = { > + .addr = vreg->addr + RPMH_REGULATOR_REG_VRM_MODE, > + }; Please add: if (mode & ~(REGULATOR_MODE_STANDBY | REGULATOR_MODE_IDLE | REGULATOR_MODE_NORMAL | REGULATOR_MODE_FAST)) return -EINVAL; That way if someone adds a new mode you don't index off the end of your array. Ah, I see, you have this in rpmh_regulator_vrm_set_mode by checking if mode > REGULATOR_MODE_STANDBY. That works. Can you move it here so it's closer to where the array access is? > +static int rpmh_regulator_vrm_set_load(struct regulator_dev *rdev, int load_uA) > +{ > + struct rpmh_vreg *vreg = rdev_get_drvdata(rdev); > + int i; > + > + for (i = 0; i < vreg->drms_mode_count - 1; i++) > + if (load_uA < vreg->drms_mode_max_uA[i]) > + break; Can you put a warning here if the requested load_uA is larger than the largest supported, and/or perhaps consider it an error case? > + > + return rpmh_regulator_vrm_set_mode(rdev, vreg->drms_mode[i]); Might not hurt to have a comment saying that this calls rpmh_regulator_vrm_set_mode() instead of calling rpmh_regulator_vrm_set_mode_bypass() directly because this is supposed to change the mode returned by a future call to get_mode(). > +static int rpmh_regulator_vrm_set_bypass(struct regulator_dev *rdev, > + bool enable) > +{ > + struct rpmh_vreg *vreg = rdev_get_drvdata(rdev); > + int ret; > + > + if (vreg->bypassed == enable) > + return 0; Just like for enable, remove this check. The regulator core does it for you. > +static int rpmh_regulator_vrm_get_bypass(struct regulator_dev *rdev, > + bool *enable) > +{ > + struct rpmh_vreg *vreg = rdev_get_drvdata(rdev); > + > + *enable = vreg->bypassed; > + > + return 0; Should you return an error code if nobody has ever called set_bypass? ...or is it OK to just return "not bypassed"? Please document this in the code. > +static int rpmh_regulator_parse_vrm_modes(struct rpmh_vreg *vreg, > + struct device *dev, struct device_node *node) > +{ > + const char *prop; > + int i, len, ret, mode; > + u32 *buf; > + > + /* qcom,allowed-drms-modes is optional */ > + prop = "qcom,allowed-drms-modes"; > + len = of_property_count_elems_of_size(node, prop, sizeof(u32)); > + if (len < 0) > + return 0; > + > + vreg->drms_mode = devm_kcalloc(dev, len, sizeof(*vreg->drms_mode), > + GFP_KERNEL); > + vreg->drms_mode_max_uA = devm_kcalloc(dev, len, > + sizeof(*vreg->drms_mode_max_uA), GFP_KERNEL); > + if (!vreg->drms_mode || !vreg->drms_mode_max_uA) > + return -ENOMEM; > + vreg->drms_mode_count = len; > + > + buf = kcalloc(len, sizeof(*buf), GFP_KERNEL); > + if (!buf) > + return -ENOMEM; > + > + ret = of_property_read_u32_array(node, prop, buf, len); > + if (ret < 0) { > + dev_err(dev, "%s: unable to read %s, ret=%d\n", > + node->name, prop, ret); > + goto done; > + } > + > + for (i = 0; i < len; i++) { > + mode = vreg->hw_data->of_map_mode(buf[i]); > + if (mode <= 0) { Should be < 0, not <= 0 right? Unless we take Javier's suggestion (see <https://patchwork.kernel.org/patch/10346081/>) and make 0 be invalid... > +/** > + * rpmh_regulator_load_default_parameters() - initialize the RPMh resource > + * request for this regulator based on optional device tree > + * properties > + * vreg: Pointer to the individual rpmh-regulator resource > + * dev: Pointer to the top level rpmh-regulator PMIC device > + * node: Pointer to the individual rpmh-regulator resource > + * device node > + * > + * Return: 0 on success, errno on failure > + */ > +static int rpmh_regulator_load_default_parameters(struct rpmh_vreg *vreg, > + struct device *dev, struct device_node *node) > +{ > + struct tcs_cmd cmd[2] = {}; > + const struct regulator_linear_range *range; > + const char *prop; > + int cmd_count = 0; > + int ret, selector; > + u32 uV; > + > + if (vreg->hw_data->regulator_type == VRM) { > + prop = "qcom,headroom-voltage"; > + ret = of_property_read_u32(node, prop, &uV); > + if (!ret) { > + if (uV > RPMH_VRM_HEADROOM_MAX_UV) { > + dev_err(dev, "%s: %s=%u is invalid\n", > + node->name, prop, uV); > + return -EINVAL; > + } > + > + cmd[cmd_count].addr > + = vreg->addr + RPMH_REGULATOR_REG_VRM_HEADROOM; > + cmd[cmd_count++].data = DIV_ROUND_UP(uV, 1000); > + } > + > + prop = "qcom,regulator-initial-voltage"; > + ret = of_property_read_u32(node, prop, &uV); > + if (!ret) { > + range = &vreg->hw_data->voltage_range; > + selector = DIV_ROUND_UP(uV - range->min_uV, > + range->uV_step) + range->min_sel; > + if (uV < range->min_uV || selector > range->max_sel) { > + dev_err(dev, "%s: %s=%u is invalid\n", > + node->name, prop, uV); > + return -EINVAL; > + } > + > + vreg->voltage_selector = selector; > + > + cmd[cmd_count].addr > + = vreg->addr + RPMH_REGULATOR_REG_VRM_VOLTAGE; > + cmd[cmd_count++].data > + = DIV_ROUND_UP(selector * range->uV_step > + + range->min_uV, 1000); > + } Seems like you want an "else { vreg->voltage_selector = -EINVAL; }". Otherwise "get_voltage_sel" will return selector 0 before the first set, right? Previously Mark said: "If the driver can't read values it should return an appropriate error code." ...and previously you said: "I'll try this out and see if the regulator framework complains during regulator registration." > +/** > + * rpmh_regulator_init_vreg() - initialize all attributes of an rpmh-regulator > + * vreg: Pointer to the individual rpmh-regulator resource > + * dev: Pointer to the top level rpmh-regulator PMIC device > + * node: Pointer to the individual rpmh-regulator resource > + * device node > + * pmic_id: String used to identify the top level rpmh-regulator > + * PMIC device on the board > + * rpmh_data: Pointer to a null-terminated array of rpmh-regulator > + * resources defined for the top level PMIC device > + * > + * Return: 0 on success, errno on failure > + */ > +static int rpmh_regulator_init_vreg(struct rpmh_vreg *vreg, struct device *dev, > + struct device_node *node, const char *pmic_id, > + const struct rpmh_vreg_init_data *rpmh_data) > +{ > + struct regulator_config reg_config = {}; > + char rpmh_resource_name[20] = ""; > + struct regulator_dev *rdev; > + enum rpmh_regulator_type type; > + struct regulator_init_data *init_data; > + unsigned int mode; > + int i, ret; > + > + for (; rpmh_data->name; rpmh_data++) > + if (!strcmp(rpmh_data->name, node->name)) > + break; > + > + if (!rpmh_data->name) { > + dev_err(dev, "Unknown regulator %s\n", node->name); > + return -EINVAL; > + } > + > + scnprintf(rpmh_resource_name, sizeof(rpmh_resource_name), > + rpmh_data->resource_name, pmic_id); If the resulting string is exactly 20 characters then rpmh_resource_name won't be zero terminated. Please handle this properly. > +static const u32 pmic_mode_map_pmic4_ldo[REGULATOR_MODE_STANDBY + 1] = { I may have suggested using this as an array that could be used as a "map" (index by regulator framework mode and get the PMIC mode), but now that I see it it doesn't seem super appealing since the regulator framework mode is not 0, 1, 2, 3 but is actually 1, 2, 4, 8. ...but I guess it's not too bad--you're allocating 9 ints to map 4 elements and I guess that's about as efficient as you're going to get even if it feels a bit ugly. ...but still a few improvements: * Don't specify the size of the array as "REGULATOR_MODE_STANDBY + 1". Let the compiler handle this. It should do the right thing. Then if someone ever changes the order of the #defines things will just work, I think. * Make sure that users of these arrays check that the mode is one of the mode you know about. That way if someone does add a new mode you don't index off your array. I'll put a comment in the user. Also: the type of this array is 'u32' but you're assigning -EINVAL in some cases. Please fix to be signed. Here and on other similar arrays. > +static unsigned int rpmh_regulator_pmic4_bob_of_map_mode(unsigned int mode) > +{ > + static const unsigned int of_mode_map[RPMH_REGULATOR_MODE_COUNT] = { > + [RPMH_REGULATOR_MODE_RET] = -EINVAL, > + [RPMH_REGULATOR_MODE_LPM] = REGULATOR_MODE_IDLE, > + [RPMH_REGULATOR_MODE_AUTO] = REGULATOR_MODE_NORMAL, > + [RPMH_REGULATOR_MODE_HPM] = REGULATOR_MODE_FAST, > + }; You're sticking a negative value in an array of unsigned inits. Here and in other similar functions. I know, I know. The function is defined to return an unsigned int. It's wrong. of_regulator.c clearly puts the return code in a signed int. First attempt at fixing this is at <https://patchwork.kernel.org/patch/10346081/>. > +static const struct rpmh_vreg_hw_data pmic4_bob = { > + .regulator_type = VRM, > + .ops = &rpmh_regulator_vrm_bypass_ops, > + .voltage_range = REGULATOR_LINEAR_RANGE(1824000, 0, 83, 32000), > + .n_voltages = 84, > + .pmic_mode_map = pmic_mode_map_pmic4_bob, > + .of_map_mode = rpmh_regulator_pmic4_bob_of_map_mode, > + .bypass_mode = 0, Remove .bypass_mode from the structure and just change rpmh_regulator_vrm_set_mode_bypass() to set 0 if we're in bypass. Right now 100% of PMICs that support bypass use 0 as the bypass mode. If you ever have a future PMIC that uses a non-zero mode for bypass then we can always add this back. ...and if no future PMICs ever use a non-zero bypass mode then we don't need the complexity of having another field in this struct. If you don't do this you might get arguments from some people saying that they don't like seeing inits of "= 0" in static structures (Linux conventions seem to like you to just assume that structs are zero-initted). > +static int rpmh_regulator_probe(struct platform_device *pdev) > +{ > + struct device *dev = &pdev->dev; > + const struct rpmh_vreg_init_data *vreg_data; > + struct rpmh_client *rpmh_client; > + struct device_node *node; > + struct rpmh_vreg *vreg; > + const char *pmic_id; > + int ret; > + > + ret = cmd_db_ready(); > + if (ret < 0) { > + if (ret != -EPROBE_DEFER) > + dev_err(dev, "Command DB not available, ret=%d\n", ret); > + return ret; > + } In the last patch Stephen said: > We should just make rpmh parent device call cmd_db_ready() so that these > devices aren't even populated until then and so that cmd_db_ready() is > only in one place. Lina? Any news here? > + > + vreg_data = of_device_get_match_data(dev); > + if (!vreg_data) > + return -ENODEV; > + > + ret = of_property_read_string(dev->of_node, "qcom,pmic-id", &pmic_id); > + if (ret < 0) { > + dev_err(dev, "qcom,pmic-id missing in DT node\n"); > + return ret; > + } > + > + rpmh_client = rpmh_get_client(pdev); > + if (IS_ERR(rpmh_client)) > + return PTR_ERR(rpmh_client); > + platform_set_drvdata(pdev, rpmh_client); > + > + for_each_available_child_of_node(dev->of_node, node) { > + vreg = devm_kzalloc(dev, sizeof(*vreg), GFP_KERNEL); > + if (!vreg) { > + ret = -ENOMEM; > + of_node_put(node); > + goto cleanup; > + } > + > + vreg->rpmh_client = rpmh_client; > + > + ret = rpmh_regulator_init_vreg(vreg, dev, node, pmic_id, > + vreg_data); > + if (ret < 0) { > + of_node_put(node); > + goto cleanup; > + } > + } > + > + return 0; > + > +cleanup: > + rpmh_release(rpmh_client); Still no devm_rpmh_get_client()? If Lina is too busy spinning her patch series for other stuff, just add it to RPMH as a patch in your series. I believe it's just this (untested): --- int devm_rpmh_release(struct device *dev, void *res) { struct platform_device *pdev = to_platform_device(dev); rpmh_release(pdev); } int devm_rpmh_get_client(struct device *dev) { struct platform_device *pdev = to_platform_device(dev); void *dr; int rc; dr = devres_alloc(devm_rpmh_release, 0, GFP_KERNEL); if (!dr) return -ENOMEM; rc = rpmh_get_client(pdev); if (!rc) devres_add(dev, dr); else devres_free(dr); return rc; } --- Note that you'll get rid of the error handling in probe, the whole remove function, and the need to do platform_set_drvdata(). -Doug -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe devicetree" in the body of a message to majordomo@vger.kernel.org More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html
On 04/17/2018 01:02 PM, Doug Anderson wrote: > On Fri, Apr 13, 2018 at 7:50 PM, David Collins <collinsd@codeaurora.org> wrote: >> +#define RPMH_REGULATOR_DISABLE 0x0 >> +#define RPMH_REGULATOR_ENABLE 0x1 > > In the last version Stephen said he didn't like the above two #defines > and you said you'd remove them, yet they are still here. Explanation? I thought that he was referring to the comments above the constants since his review comment was immediately following the second of two comments as opposed to these constants. I'll let him follow-up on this point if necessary. >> + * @drms_mode: Array of regulator framework modes which can >> + * be configured dynamically for this regulator >> + * via the set_load() callback. > > Using the singular for something that is an array is confusing. Why > not "drms_modes" or "drms_mode_arr"? In the past review you said > 'Perhaps something along the lines of "drms_modes"'. It seems awkward to me to use a plural for arrays as it leads to indexing like this: vreg->drms_modes[i]. "mode i" seems better than "modes i". However, I'm willing to change this to be drms_modes and drms_mode_max_uAs if that style is preferred. >> +struct rpmh_vreg { >> + struct rpmh_client *rpmh_client; >> + u32 addr; >> + struct regulator_desc rdesc; >> + const struct rpmh_vreg_hw_data *hw_data; >> + enum rpmh_regulator_type regulator_type; >> + bool always_wait_for_ack; >> + unsigned int *drms_mode; >> + int *drms_mode_max_uA; >> + size_t drms_mode_count; >> + >> + bool enabled; >> + int voltage_selector; >> + unsigned int mode; >> + bool bypassed; > > nit: stick next to "enabled" to make slightly better structure packing... Ok >> +static int rpmh_regulator_vrm_set_voltage_sel(struct regulator_dev *rdev, >> + unsigned int selector) >> +{ >> + struct rpmh_vreg *vreg = rdev_get_drvdata(rdev); >> + struct tcs_cmd cmd = { >> + .addr = vreg->addr + RPMH_REGULATOR_REG_VRM_VOLTAGE, >> + }; >> + int ret; >> + >> + /* VRM voltage control register is set with voltage in millivolts. */ >> + cmd.data = DIV_ROUND_UP(regulator_list_voltage_linear_range(rdev, >> + selector), 1000); >> + >> + ret = rpmh_regulator_send_request(vreg, &cmd, 1, >> + selector > vreg->voltage_selector); > > If you init vreg->voltage_selector to an error as I suggest in > rpmh_regulator_load_default_parameters() you'll need to handle it > here. See below. Ok >> +static int rpmh_regulator_vrm_set_mode_bypass(struct rpmh_vreg *vreg, >> + unsigned int mode, bool bypassed) >> +{ >> + struct tcs_cmd cmd = { >> + .addr = vreg->addr + RPMH_REGULATOR_REG_VRM_MODE, >> + }; > > Please add: > > if (mode & ~(REGULATOR_MODE_STANDBY | > REGULATOR_MODE_IDLE | > REGULATOR_MODE_NORMAL | > REGULATOR_MODE_FAST)) > return -EINVAL; > > That way if someone adds a new mode you don't index off the end of > your array. Ah, I see, you have this in rpmh_regulator_vrm_set_mode > by checking if mode > REGULATOR_MODE_STANDBY. That works. Can you > move it here so it's closer to where the array access is? Theoretically, the (mode > REGULATOR_MODE_STANDBY) check in rpmh_regulator_vrm_set_mode() shouldn't be necessary at all. I felt safer leaving it in though. The framework ensures that no mode values may be passed into rpmh_regulator_vrm_set_mode() which is not identified in constraints.valid_modes_mask. Similar sanitization happens for internal rpmh_regulator_vrm_set_mode() calls. I'll move the (mode > REGULATOR_MODE_STANDBY) check into rpmh_regulator_vrm_set_mode_bypass(). >> +static int rpmh_regulator_vrm_set_load(struct regulator_dev *rdev, int load_uA) >> +{ >> + struct rpmh_vreg *vreg = rdev_get_drvdata(rdev); >> + int i; >> + >> + for (i = 0; i < vreg->drms_mode_count - 1; i++) >> + if (load_uA < vreg->drms_mode_max_uA[i]) >> + break; > > Can you put a warning here if the requested load_uA is larger than the > largest supported, and/or perhaps consider it an error case? I'll add a warning. >> + >> + return rpmh_regulator_vrm_set_mode(rdev, vreg->drms_mode[i]); > > Might not hurt to have a comment saying that this calls > rpmh_regulator_vrm_set_mode() instead of calling > rpmh_regulator_vrm_set_mode_bypass() directly because this is supposed > to change the mode returned by a future call to get_mode(). This seems pretty clear on inspection of the very closely spaced functions. I don't see the need for a comment about it. >> +static int rpmh_regulator_vrm_set_bypass(struct regulator_dev *rdev, >> + bool enable) >> +{ >> + struct rpmh_vreg *vreg = rdev_get_drvdata(rdev); >> + int ret; >> + >> + if (vreg->bypassed == enable) >> + return 0; > > Just like for enable, remove this check. The regulator core does it for you. Ok >> +static int rpmh_regulator_vrm_get_bypass(struct regulator_dev *rdev, >> + bool *enable) >> +{ >> + struct rpmh_vreg *vreg = rdev_get_drvdata(rdev); >> + >> + *enable = vreg->bypassed; >> + >> + return 0; > > Should you return an error code if nobody has ever called set_bypass? > ...or is it OK to just return "not bypassed"? Please document this in > the code. I think it is fine to return "not bypassed" by default if there is no configuration in place to enable bypassing. How are you suggesting that this be documented in the code? >> +static int rpmh_regulator_parse_vrm_modes(struct rpmh_vreg *vreg, >> + struct device *dev, struct device_node *node) >> +{ >> + const char *prop; >> + int i, len, ret, mode; >> + u32 *buf; >> + >> + /* qcom,allowed-drms-modes is optional */ >> + prop = "qcom,allowed-drms-modes"; >> + len = of_property_count_elems_of_size(node, prop, sizeof(u32)); >> + if (len < 0) >> + return 0; >> + >> + vreg->drms_mode = devm_kcalloc(dev, len, sizeof(*vreg->drms_mode), >> + GFP_KERNEL); >> + vreg->drms_mode_max_uA = devm_kcalloc(dev, len, >> + sizeof(*vreg->drms_mode_max_uA), GFP_KERNEL); >> + if (!vreg->drms_mode || !vreg->drms_mode_max_uA) >> + return -ENOMEM; >> + vreg->drms_mode_count = len; >> + >> + buf = kcalloc(len, sizeof(*buf), GFP_KERNEL); >> + if (!buf) >> + return -ENOMEM; >> + >> + ret = of_property_read_u32_array(node, prop, buf, len); >> + if (ret < 0) { >> + dev_err(dev, "%s: unable to read %s, ret=%d\n", >> + node->name, prop, ret); >> + goto done; >> + } >> + >> + for (i = 0; i < len; i++) { >> + mode = vreg->hw_data->of_map_mode(buf[i]); >> + if (mode <= 0) { > > Should be < 0, not <= 0 right? Unless we take Javier's suggestion > (see <https://patchwork.kernel.org/patch/10346081/>) and make 0 be > invalid... It looks like the way forward is REGULATOR_MODE_INVALID == 0 so '<= 0' is fine here. I suppose that it could be changed to '== REGULATOR_MODE_INVALID' as well. >> + prop = "qcom,regulator-initial-voltage"; >> + ret = of_property_read_u32(node, prop, &uV); >> + if (!ret) { >> + range = &vreg->hw_data->voltage_range; >> + selector = DIV_ROUND_UP(uV - range->min_uV, >> + range->uV_step) + range->min_sel; >> + if (uV < range->min_uV || selector > range->max_sel) { >> + dev_err(dev, "%s: %s=%u is invalid\n", >> + node->name, prop, uV); >> + return -EINVAL; >> + } >> + >> + vreg->voltage_selector = selector; >> + >> + cmd[cmd_count].addr >> + = vreg->addr + RPMH_REGULATOR_REG_VRM_VOLTAGE; >> + cmd[cmd_count++].data >> + = DIV_ROUND_UP(selector * range->uV_step >> + + range->min_uV, 1000); >> + } > > Seems like you want an "else { vreg->voltage_selector = -EINVAL; }". > Otherwise "get_voltage_sel" will return selector 0 before the first > set, right? > > Previously Mark said: "If the driver can't read values it should > return an appropriate error code." > ...and previously you said: "I'll try this out and see if the > regulator framework complains during regulator registration." I tested out what happens when vreg->voltage_selector = -EINVAL is set when qcom,regulator-initial-voltage is not present. This results in devm_regulator_register() failing and subsequently causing the qcom_rpmh-regulator probe to fail. The error happens in machine_constraints_voltage() [1]. This leaves two courses of action: 1. (current patch set) allow voltage_selector to stay 0 if uninitialized 2. Set voltage_selector = -EINVAL by default and specify in DT binding documentation that qcom,regulator-initial-voltage is required for VRM managed RPMh regulator resources which have regulator-min-microvolt and regulator-max-microvolt specified. Are you ok with the DT implications of option #2? >> +static int rpmh_regulator_init_vreg(struct rpmh_vreg *vreg, struct device *dev, >> + struct device_node *node, const char *pmic_id, >> + const struct rpmh_vreg_init_data *rpmh_data) >> +{ >> + struct regulator_config reg_config = {}; >> + char rpmh_resource_name[20] = ""; >> + struct regulator_dev *rdev; >> + enum rpmh_regulator_type type; >> + struct regulator_init_data *init_data; >> + unsigned int mode; >> + int i, ret; >> + >> + for (; rpmh_data->name; rpmh_data++) >> + if (!strcmp(rpmh_data->name, node->name)) >> + break; >> + >> + if (!rpmh_data->name) { >> + dev_err(dev, "Unknown regulator %s\n", node->name); >> + return -EINVAL; >> + } >> + >> + scnprintf(rpmh_resource_name, sizeof(rpmh_resource_name), >> + rpmh_data->resource_name, pmic_id); > > If the resulting string is exactly 20 characters then > rpmh_resource_name won't be zero terminated. Please handle this > properly. The output of scnprintf() is always null-terminated; therefore, no other check is needed. Also, RPMh resource names stored in SMEM command DB data structure are at most 8 bytes (<= 7 char + '\0' or 8 char and no '\0') so using 20 chars in the buffer is overkill anyway. >> +static const u32 pmic_mode_map_pmic4_ldo[REGULATOR_MODE_STANDBY + 1] = { > > I may have suggested using this as an array that could be used as a > "map" (index by regulator framework mode and get the PMIC mode), but > now that I see it it doesn't seem super appealing since the regulator > framework mode is not 0, 1, 2, 3 but is actually 1, 2, 4, 8. ...but I > guess it's not too bad--you're allocating 9 ints to map 4 elements and > I guess that's about as efficient as you're going to get even if it > feels a bit ugly. I'm ok with the sparse mapping as it makes indexing as simple as possible and the extra space used is insignificant. > ...but still a few improvements: > > * Don't specify the size of the array as "REGULATOR_MODE_STANDBY + 1". > Let the compiler handle this. It should do the right thing. Then if > someone ever changes the order of the #defines things will just work, > I think. > > * Make sure that users of these arrays check that the mode is one of > the mode you know about. That way if someone does add a new mode you > don't index off your array. I'll put a comment in the user. Even if a new mode was added, the relative ordering of the existing modes should not change and valid_modes_mask will only allow modes currently supported by the driver. I'd like to keep the bound checks as simple as possible. By explicitly sizing the arrays and then only checking for mode > REGULATOR_MODE_STANDBY when indexing into the array we can be sure that no out-of-bound access can ever occur. Also, if one of the existing mode value was made larger than REGULATOR_MODE_STANDBY it would be easy to catch as it would cause a compilation error. Thus, I'd prefer to keep the array sizing and index checking as-in unless there is a major objection. > Also: the type of this array is 'u32' but you're assigning -EINVAL in > some cases. Please fix to be signed. Here and on other similar > arrays. Ok. >> +static unsigned int rpmh_regulator_pmic4_bob_of_map_mode(unsigned int mode) >> +{ >> + static const unsigned int of_mode_map[RPMH_REGULATOR_MODE_COUNT] = { >> + [RPMH_REGULATOR_MODE_RET] = -EINVAL, >> + [RPMH_REGULATOR_MODE_LPM] = REGULATOR_MODE_IDLE, >> + [RPMH_REGULATOR_MODE_AUTO] = REGULATOR_MODE_NORMAL, >> + [RPMH_REGULATOR_MODE_HPM] = REGULATOR_MODE_FAST, >> + }; > > You're sticking a negative value in an array of unsigned inits. Here > and in other similar functions. > > I know, I know. The function is defined to return an unsigned int. > It's wrong. of_regulator.c clearly puts the return code in a signed > int. First attempt at fixing this is at > <https://patchwork.kernel.org/patch/10346081/>. I can change the error cases to use REGULATOR_MODE_INVALID which is added by this change still under review [2]. >> +static const struct rpmh_vreg_hw_data pmic4_bob = { >> + .regulator_type = VRM, >> + .ops = &rpmh_regulator_vrm_bypass_ops, >> + .voltage_range = REGULATOR_LINEAR_RANGE(1824000, 0, 83, 32000), >> + .n_voltages = 84, >> + .pmic_mode_map = pmic_mode_map_pmic4_bob, >> + .of_map_mode = rpmh_regulator_pmic4_bob_of_map_mode, >> + .bypass_mode = 0, > > Remove .bypass_mode from the structure and just change > rpmh_regulator_vrm_set_mode_bypass() to set 0 if we're in bypass. > Right now 100% of PMICs that support bypass use 0 as the bypass mode. > If you ever have a future PMIC that uses a non-zero mode for bypass > then we can always add this back. ...and if no future PMICs ever use > a non-zero bypass mode then we don't need the complexity of having > another field in this struct. > > If you don't do this you might get arguments from some people saying > that they don't like seeing inits of "= 0" in static structures (Linux > conventions seem to like you to just assume that structs are > zero-initted). Upcoming PMICs use 2 for bypass mode instead of 0. That is why I left this in. I suppose that I can remove this member for now and add it back in when newer PMIC support is added. >> +static int rpmh_regulator_probe(struct platform_device *pdev) >> +{ >> + struct device *dev = &pdev->dev; >> + const struct rpmh_vreg_init_data *vreg_data; >> + struct rpmh_client *rpmh_client; >> + struct device_node *node; >> + struct rpmh_vreg *vreg; >> + const char *pmic_id; >> + int ret; >> + >> + ret = cmd_db_ready(); >> + if (ret < 0) { >> + if (ret != -EPROBE_DEFER) >> + dev_err(dev, "Command DB not available, ret=%d\n", ret); >> + return ret; >> + } > > In the last patch Stephen said: > >> We should just make rpmh parent device call cmd_db_ready() so that these >> devices aren't even populated until then and so that cmd_db_ready() is >> only in one place. Lina? > > Any news here? I don't think that Lina has tried to include this in her rpmh series yet. >> +cleanup: >> + rpmh_release(rpmh_client); > > Still no devm_rpmh_get_client()? If Lina is too busy spinning her > patch series for other stuff, just add it to RPMH as a patch in your > series. I believe it's just this (untested): > > --- > > int devm_rpmh_release(struct device *dev, void *res) > { > struct platform_device *pdev = to_platform_device(dev); > rpmh_release(pdev); > } > > int devm_rpmh_get_client(struct device *dev) > { > struct platform_device *pdev = to_platform_device(dev); > void *dr; > int rc; > > dr = devres_alloc(devm_rpmh_release, 0, GFP_KERNEL); > if (!dr) > return -ENOMEM; > > rc = rpmh_get_client(pdev); > if (!rc) > devres_add(dev, dr); > else > devres_free(dr); > > return rc; > } > > --- > > Note that you'll get rid of the error handling in probe, the whole > remove function, and the need to do platform_set_drvdata(). My understanding is that Lina is going to remove both rpmh_get_client() and rpmh_release(). In their place, rpmh functions will use the consumer device pointer as a handle and manage any necessary state internally [3]. I'll update this patch once she uploads a new series with this interface modification. Thanks, David [1]: https://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/torvalds/linux.git/tree/drivers/regulator/core.c?h=v4.17-rc1#n888 [2]: https://patchwork.kernel.org/patch/10348631/ [3]: https://lkml.org/lkml/2018/4/10/1273
Quoting David Collins (2018-04-18 16:30:26) > On 04/17/2018 01:02 PM, Doug Anderson wrote: > > On Fri, Apr 13, 2018 at 7:50 PM, David Collins <collinsd@codeaurora.org> wrote: > >> +#define RPMH_REGULATOR_DISABLE 0x0 > >> +#define RPMH_REGULATOR_ENABLE 0x1 > > > > In the last version Stephen said he didn't like the above two #defines > > and you said you'd remove them, yet they are still here. Explanation? > > I thought that he was referring to the comments above the constants since > his review comment was immediately following the second of two comments as > opposed to these constants. I'll let him follow-up on this point if > necessary. > I think I was talking about the comments. The defines don't look super useful either though. -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe devicetree" in the body of a message to majordomo@vger.kernel.org More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html
Hi, On Wed, Apr 18, 2018 at 4:30 PM, David Collins <collinsd@codeaurora.org> wrote: >>> + * @drms_mode: Array of regulator framework modes which can >>> + * be configured dynamically for this regulator >>> + * via the set_load() callback. >> >> Using the singular for something that is an array is confusing. Why >> not "drms_modes" or "drms_mode_arr"? In the past review you said >> 'Perhaps something along the lines of "drms_modes"'. > > It seems awkward to me to use a plural for arrays as it leads to indexing > like this: vreg->drms_modes[i]. "mode i" seems better than "modes i". > However, I'm willing to change this to be drms_modes and drms_mode_max_uAs > if that style is preferred. I'd very much like a plural here. >>> +static int rpmh_regulator_vrm_set_mode_bypass(struct rpmh_vreg *vreg, >>> + unsigned int mode, bool bypassed) >>> +{ >>> + struct tcs_cmd cmd = { >>> + .addr = vreg->addr + RPMH_REGULATOR_REG_VRM_MODE, >>> + }; >> >> Please add: >> >> if (mode & ~(REGULATOR_MODE_STANDBY | >> REGULATOR_MODE_IDLE | >> REGULATOR_MODE_NORMAL | >> REGULATOR_MODE_FAST)) >> return -EINVAL; >> >> That way if someone adds a new mode you don't index off the end of >> your array. Ah, I see, you have this in rpmh_regulator_vrm_set_mode >> by checking if mode > REGULATOR_MODE_STANDBY. That works. Can you >> move it here so it's closer to where the array access is? > > Theoretically, the (mode > REGULATOR_MODE_STANDBY) check in > rpmh_regulator_vrm_set_mode() shouldn't be necessary at all. I felt safer > leaving it in though. The framework ensures that no mode values may be > passed into rpmh_regulator_vrm_set_mode() which is not identified in > constraints.valid_modes_mask. Similar sanitization happens for internal > rpmh_regulator_vrm_set_mode() calls. > > I'll move the (mode > REGULATOR_MODE_STANDBY) check into > rpmh_regulator_vrm_set_mode_bypass(). Ah, good point about the valid_modes_mask! I'm happy with moving the test here. I wouldn't mind a comment saying that the check is probably overkill because the framework already checks valid_modes_mask but shouldn't hurt. >>> + >>> + return rpmh_regulator_vrm_set_mode(rdev, vreg->drms_mode[i]); >> >> Might not hurt to have a comment saying that this calls >> rpmh_regulator_vrm_set_mode() instead of calling >> rpmh_regulator_vrm_set_mode_bypass() directly because this is supposed >> to change the mode returned by a future call to get_mode(). > > This seems pretty clear on inspection of the very closely spaced > functions. I don't see the need for a comment about it. It wasn't clear to me--I thought it might have just been because you didn't want to manually pass in the current bypass state. Then I looked at the function and thought there might have been a bug because it was saving the mode. Then I looked back at the regulator framework and finally came to the conclusion that set_load() is supposed to change the mode (AKA: you'd expect that calling get_mode() after set_load() would show you the mode you ended up at). I guess this is all perhaps obvious to any regulator framework experts, but since I spent 5 minutes digging through all that it seemed like it deserved a comment to save the next person the 5 minutes. ...but I won't insist. >>> +static int rpmh_regulator_vrm_get_bypass(struct regulator_dev *rdev, >>> + bool *enable) >>> +{ >>> + struct rpmh_vreg *vreg = rdev_get_drvdata(rdev); >>> + >>> + *enable = vreg->bypassed; >>> + >>> + return 0; >> >> Should you return an error code if nobody has ever called set_bypass? >> ...or is it OK to just return "not bypassed"? Please document this in >> the code. > > I think it is fine to return "not bypassed" by default if there is no > configuration in place to enable bypassing. How are you suggesting that > this be documented in the code? I guess I wish the function had comments and then it could be documented there. ...but none of the functions in this file do... I guess you're right that it's clear enough without a comment, so let's just leave it as is. >>> +static int rpmh_regulator_parse_vrm_modes(struct rpmh_vreg *vreg, >>> + struct device *dev, struct device_node *node) >>> +{ >>> + const char *prop; >>> + int i, len, ret, mode; >>> + u32 *buf; >>> + >>> + /* qcom,allowed-drms-modes is optional */ >>> + prop = "qcom,allowed-drms-modes"; >>> + len = of_property_count_elems_of_size(node, prop, sizeof(u32)); >>> + if (len < 0) >>> + return 0; >>> + >>> + vreg->drms_mode = devm_kcalloc(dev, len, sizeof(*vreg->drms_mode), >>> + GFP_KERNEL); >>> + vreg->drms_mode_max_uA = devm_kcalloc(dev, len, >>> + sizeof(*vreg->drms_mode_max_uA), GFP_KERNEL); >>> + if (!vreg->drms_mode || !vreg->drms_mode_max_uA) >>> + return -ENOMEM; >>> + vreg->drms_mode_count = len; >>> + >>> + buf = kcalloc(len, sizeof(*buf), GFP_KERNEL); >>> + if (!buf) >>> + return -ENOMEM; >>> + >>> + ret = of_property_read_u32_array(node, prop, buf, len); >>> + if (ret < 0) { >>> + dev_err(dev, "%s: unable to read %s, ret=%d\n", >>> + node->name, prop, ret); >>> + goto done; >>> + } >>> + >>> + for (i = 0; i < len; i++) { >>> + mode = vreg->hw_data->of_map_mode(buf[i]); >>> + if (mode <= 0) { >> >> Should be < 0, not <= 0 right? Unless we take Javier's suggestion >> (see <https://patchwork.kernel.org/patch/10346081/>) and make 0 be >> invalid... > > It looks like the way forward is REGULATOR_MODE_INVALID == 0 so '<= 0' is > fine here. I suppose that it could be changed to '== > REGULATOR_MODE_INVALID' as well. Yes, assuming my patch lands using "==" is better. Checking whether an unsigned value is <= 0 is confusing. >>> + prop = "qcom,regulator-initial-voltage"; >>> + ret = of_property_read_u32(node, prop, &uV); >>> + if (!ret) { >>> + range = &vreg->hw_data->voltage_range; >>> + selector = DIV_ROUND_UP(uV - range->min_uV, >>> + range->uV_step) + range->min_sel; >>> + if (uV < range->min_uV || selector > range->max_sel) { >>> + dev_err(dev, "%s: %s=%u is invalid\n", >>> + node->name, prop, uV); >>> + return -EINVAL; >>> + } >>> + >>> + vreg->voltage_selector = selector; >>> + >>> + cmd[cmd_count].addr >>> + = vreg->addr + RPMH_REGULATOR_REG_VRM_VOLTAGE; >>> + cmd[cmd_count++].data >>> + = DIV_ROUND_UP(selector * range->uV_step >>> + + range->min_uV, 1000); >>> + } >> >> Seems like you want an "else { vreg->voltage_selector = -EINVAL; }". >> Otherwise "get_voltage_sel" will return selector 0 before the first >> set, right? >> >> Previously Mark said: "If the driver can't read values it should >> return an appropriate error code." >> ...and previously you said: "I'll try this out and see if the >> regulator framework complains during regulator registration." > > I tested out what happens when vreg->voltage_selector = -EINVAL is set > when qcom,regulator-initial-voltage is not present. This results in > devm_regulator_register() failing and subsequently causing the > qcom_rpmh-regulator probe to fail. The error happens in > machine_constraints_voltage() [1]. > > This leaves two courses of action: > 1. (current patch set) allow voltage_selector to stay 0 if uninitialized > 2. Set voltage_selector = -EINVAL by default and specify in DT binding > documentation that qcom,regulator-initial-voltage is required for VRM > managed RPMh regulator resources which have regulator-min-microvolt and > regulator-max-microvolt specified. > > Are you ok with the DT implications of option #2? You'd need to ask Mark if he's OK with it, but a option #3 is to add a patch to your series fix the regulator framework to try setting the voltage if _regulator_get_voltage() fails. Presumably in machine_constraints_voltage() you'd now do something like: int target_min, target_max; int current_uV = _regulator_get_voltage(rdev); if (current_uV < 0) { /* Maybe this regulator's hardware can't be read and needs to be initted */ _regulator_do_set_voltage( rdev, rdev->constraints->min_uV, rdev->constraints->min_uV); current_uV = _regulator_get_voltage(rdev); } if (current_uV < 0) { rdev_err(rdev, "failed to get the current voltage(%d)\n", current_uV); return current_uV; } If Mark doesn't like that then I guess I'd be OK w/ initting it to 0 but this needs to be documented _somewhere_ (unlike for bypass it's not obvious, so you need to find someplace to put it). I'd rather not hack the DT to deal with our software limitations. >>> +static int rpmh_regulator_init_vreg(struct rpmh_vreg *vreg, struct device *dev, >>> + struct device_node *node, const char *pmic_id, >>> + const struct rpmh_vreg_init_data *rpmh_data) >>> +{ >>> + struct regulator_config reg_config = {}; >>> + char rpmh_resource_name[20] = ""; >>> + struct regulator_dev *rdev; >>> + enum rpmh_regulator_type type; >>> + struct regulator_init_data *init_data; >>> + unsigned int mode; >>> + int i, ret; >>> + >>> + for (; rpmh_data->name; rpmh_data++) >>> + if (!strcmp(rpmh_data->name, node->name)) >>> + break; >>> + >>> + if (!rpmh_data->name) { >>> + dev_err(dev, "Unknown regulator %s\n", node->name); >>> + return -EINVAL; >>> + } >>> + >>> + scnprintf(rpmh_resource_name, sizeof(rpmh_resource_name), >>> + rpmh_data->resource_name, pmic_id); >> >> If the resulting string is exactly 20 characters then >> rpmh_resource_name won't be zero terminated. Please handle this >> properly. > > The output of scnprintf() is always null-terminated; therefore, no other > check is needed. Also, RPMh resource names stored in SMEM command DB data > structure are at most 8 bytes (<= 7 char + '\0' or 8 char and no '\0') so > using 20 chars in the buffer is overkill anyway. Wow, not sure where I looked to see that scnprintf() didn't always null-terminate. Sorry. Ignore this. >>> +static const u32 pmic_mode_map_pmic4_ldo[REGULATOR_MODE_STANDBY + 1] = { >> >> I may have suggested using this as an array that could be used as a >> "map" (index by regulator framework mode and get the PMIC mode), but >> now that I see it it doesn't seem super appealing since the regulator >> framework mode is not 0, 1, 2, 3 but is actually 1, 2, 4, 8. ...but I >> guess it's not too bad--you're allocating 9 ints to map 4 elements and >> I guess that's about as efficient as you're going to get even if it >> feels a bit ugly. > > I'm ok with the sparse mapping as it makes indexing as simple as possible > and the extra space used is insignificant. > > >> ...but still a few improvements: >> >> * Don't specify the size of the array as "REGULATOR_MODE_STANDBY + 1". >> Let the compiler handle this. It should do the right thing. Then if >> someone ever changes the order of the #defines things will just work, >> I think. >> >> * Make sure that users of these arrays check that the mode is one of >> the mode you know about. That way if someone does add a new mode you >> don't index off your array. I'll put a comment in the user. > > Even if a new mode was added, the relative ordering of the existing modes > should not change and valid_modes_mask will only allow modes currently > supported by the driver. I'd like to keep the bound checks as simple as > possible. By explicitly sizing the arrays and then only checking for mode >> REGULATOR_MODE_STANDBY when indexing into the array we can be sure that > no out-of-bound access can ever occur. Also, if one of the existing mode > value was made larger than REGULATOR_MODE_STANDBY it would be easy to > catch as it would cause a compilation error. > > Thus, I'd prefer to keep the array sizing and index checking as-in unless > there is a major objection. OK. >>> +static unsigned int rpmh_regulator_pmic4_bob_of_map_mode(unsigned int mode) >>> +{ >>> + static const unsigned int of_mode_map[RPMH_REGULATOR_MODE_COUNT] = { >>> + [RPMH_REGULATOR_MODE_RET] = -EINVAL, >>> + [RPMH_REGULATOR_MODE_LPM] = REGULATOR_MODE_IDLE, >>> + [RPMH_REGULATOR_MODE_AUTO] = REGULATOR_MODE_NORMAL, >>> + [RPMH_REGULATOR_MODE_HPM] = REGULATOR_MODE_FAST, >>> + }; >> >> You're sticking a negative value in an array of unsigned inits. Here >> and in other similar functions. >> >> I know, I know. The function is defined to return an unsigned int. >> It's wrong. of_regulator.c clearly puts the return code in a signed >> int. First attempt at fixing this is at >> <https://patchwork.kernel.org/patch/10346081/>. > > I can change the error cases to use REGULATOR_MODE_INVALID which is added > by this change still under review [2]. I haven't seen Mark NAK it (yet), so for lack of a better option I'd start using it in your patch and document in the commit message that it depends on my patch. >>> +static const struct rpmh_vreg_hw_data pmic4_bob = { >>> + .regulator_type = VRM, >>> + .ops = &rpmh_regulator_vrm_bypass_ops, >>> + .voltage_range = REGULATOR_LINEAR_RANGE(1824000, 0, 83, 32000), >>> + .n_voltages = 84, >>> + .pmic_mode_map = pmic_mode_map_pmic4_bob, >>> + .of_map_mode = rpmh_regulator_pmic4_bob_of_map_mode, >>> + .bypass_mode = 0, >> >> Remove .bypass_mode from the structure and just change >> rpmh_regulator_vrm_set_mode_bypass() to set 0 if we're in bypass. >> Right now 100% of PMICs that support bypass use 0 as the bypass mode. >> If you ever have a future PMIC that uses a non-zero mode for bypass >> then we can always add this back. ...and if no future PMICs ever use >> a non-zero bypass mode then we don't need the complexity of having >> another field in this struct. >> >> If you don't do this you might get arguments from some people saying >> that they don't like seeing inits of "= 0" in static structures (Linux >> conventions seem to like you to just assume that structs are >> zero-initted). > > Upcoming PMICs use 2 for bypass mode instead of 0. That is why I left > this in. I suppose that I can remove this member for now and add it back > in when newer PMIC support is added. I'm OK with keeping it as long as there is a real user coming up. IMHO with the #defines as suggested by Matthias this will look better anyway (it will be more obvious that this isn't a boolean, for instance). >>> +cleanup: >>> + rpmh_release(rpmh_client); >> >> Still no devm_rpmh_get_client()? If Lina is too busy spinning her >> patch series for other stuff, just add it to RPMH as a patch in your >> series. I believe it's just this (untested): >> >> --- >> >> int devm_rpmh_release(struct device *dev, void *res) >> { >> struct platform_device *pdev = to_platform_device(dev); >> rpmh_release(pdev); >> } >> >> int devm_rpmh_get_client(struct device *dev) >> { >> struct platform_device *pdev = to_platform_device(dev); >> void *dr; >> int rc; >> >> dr = devres_alloc(devm_rpmh_release, 0, GFP_KERNEL); >> if (!dr) >> return -ENOMEM; >> >> rc = rpmh_get_client(pdev); >> if (!rc) >> devres_add(dev, dr); >> else >> devres_free(dr); >> >> return rc; >> } >> >> --- >> >> Note that you'll get rid of the error handling in probe, the whole >> remove function, and the need to do platform_set_drvdata(). > > My understanding is that Lina is going to remove both rpmh_get_client() > and rpmh_release(). In their place, rpmh functions will use the consumer > device pointer as a handle and manage any necessary state internally [3]. > I'll update this patch once she uploads a new series with this interface > modification. OK, sounds good. Information like this is nice to include somewhere in the cover letter or the patch description so it's more obvious that you wouldn't want this patch to land until that's sorted out. -Doug -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe devicetree" in the body of a message to majordomo@vger.kernel.org More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html
On 04/19/2018 09:16 AM, Doug Anderson wrote: > On Wed, Apr 18, 2018 at 4:30 PM, David Collins <collinsd@codeaurora.org> wrote: >>>> + * @drms_mode: Array of regulator framework modes which can >>>> + * be configured dynamically for this regulator >>>> + * via the set_load() callback. >>> >>> Using the singular for something that is an array is confusing. Why >>> not "drms_modes" or "drms_mode_arr"? In the past review you said >>> 'Perhaps something along the lines of "drms_modes"'. >> >> It seems awkward to me to use a plural for arrays as it leads to indexing >> like this: vreg->drms_modes[i]. "mode i" seems better than "modes i". >> However, I'm willing to change this to be drms_modes and drms_mode_max_uAs >> if that style is preferred. > > I'd very much like a plural here. Ok. I'll change this to be plural. >>>> + prop = "qcom,regulator-initial-voltage"; >>>> + ret = of_property_read_u32(node, prop, &uV); >>>> + if (!ret) { >>>> + range = &vreg->hw_data->voltage_range; >>>> + selector = DIV_ROUND_UP(uV - range->min_uV, >>>> + range->uV_step) + range->min_sel; >>>> + if (uV < range->min_uV || selector > range->max_sel) { >>>> + dev_err(dev, "%s: %s=%u is invalid\n", >>>> + node->name, prop, uV); >>>> + return -EINVAL; >>>> + } >>>> + >>>> + vreg->voltage_selector = selector; >>>> + >>>> + cmd[cmd_count].addr >>>> + = vreg->addr + RPMH_REGULATOR_REG_VRM_VOLTAGE; >>>> + cmd[cmd_count++].data >>>> + = DIV_ROUND_UP(selector * range->uV_step >>>> + + range->min_uV, 1000); >>>> + } >>> >>> Seems like you want an "else { vreg->voltage_selector = -EINVAL; }". >>> Otherwise "get_voltage_sel" will return selector 0 before the first >>> set, right? >>> >>> Previously Mark said: "If the driver can't read values it should >>> return an appropriate error code." >>> ...and previously you said: "I'll try this out and see if the >>> regulator framework complains during regulator registration." >> >> I tested out what happens when vreg->voltage_selector = -EINVAL is set >> when qcom,regulator-initial-voltage is not present. This results in >> devm_regulator_register() failing and subsequently causing the >> qcom_rpmh-regulator probe to fail. The error happens in >> machine_constraints_voltage() [1]. >> >> This leaves two courses of action: >> 1. (current patch set) allow voltage_selector to stay 0 if uninitialized >> 2. Set voltage_selector = -EINVAL by default and specify in DT binding >> documentation that qcom,regulator-initial-voltage is required for VRM >> managed RPMh regulator resources which have regulator-min-microvolt and >> regulator-max-microvolt specified. >> >> Are you ok with the DT implications of option #2? > > You'd need to ask Mark if he's OK with it, but a option #3 is to add a > patch to your series fix the regulator framework to try setting the > voltage if _regulator_get_voltage() fails. Presumably in > machine_constraints_voltage() you'd now do something like: > > int target_min, target_max; > int current_uV = _regulator_get_voltage(rdev); > if (current_uV < 0) { > /* Maybe this regulator's hardware can't be read and needs to be initted */ > _regulator_do_set_voltage( > rdev, rdev->constraints->min_uV, rdev->constraints->min_uV); > current_uV = _regulator_get_voltage(rdev); > } > if (current_uV < 0) { > rdev_err(rdev, > "failed to get the current voltage(%d)\n", > current_uV); > return current_uV; > } > > If Mark doesn't like that then I guess I'd be OK w/ initting it to 0 > but this needs to be documented _somewhere_ (unlike for bypass it's > not obvious, so you need to find someplace to put it). I'd rather not > hack the DT to deal with our software limitations. I'm not opposed to your option #3 though it does seem a little hacky and tailored to the qcom_rpmh-regulator specific case. Note that I think it would be better to vote for min_uV to max_uV than min_uV to min_uV though. Mark, what are your thoughts on the best way to handle this situation? >>>> +static unsigned int rpmh_regulator_pmic4_bob_of_map_mode(unsigned int mode) >>>> +{ >>>> + static const unsigned int of_mode_map[RPMH_REGULATOR_MODE_COUNT] = { >>>> + [RPMH_REGULATOR_MODE_RET] = -EINVAL, >>>> + [RPMH_REGULATOR_MODE_LPM] = REGULATOR_MODE_IDLE, >>>> + [RPMH_REGULATOR_MODE_AUTO] = REGULATOR_MODE_NORMAL, >>>> + [RPMH_REGULATOR_MODE_HPM] = REGULATOR_MODE_FAST, >>>> + }; >>> >>> You're sticking a negative value in an array of unsigned inits. Here >>> and in other similar functions. >>> >>> I know, I know. The function is defined to return an unsigned int. >>> It's wrong. of_regulator.c clearly puts the return code in a signed >>> int. First attempt at fixing this is at >>> <https://patchwork.kernel.org/patch/10346081/>. >> >> I can change the error cases to use REGULATOR_MODE_INVALID which is added >> by this change still under review [2]. > > I haven't seen Mark NAK it (yet), so for lack of a better option I'd > start using it in your patch and document in the commit message that > it depends on my patch. Your patch was accepted. I'll switch to using REGULATOR_MODE_INVALID. Thanks, David
On Fri, Apr 20, 2018 at 03:08:57PM -0700, David Collins wrote: > On 04/19/2018 09:16 AM, Doug Anderson wrote: > > On Wed, Apr 18, 2018 at 4:30 PM, David Collins <collinsd@codeaurora.org> wrote: Please delete unneeded context from mails when replying. Doing this makes it much easier to find your reply in the message, helping ensure it won't be missed by people scrolling through the irrelevant quoted material. > > You'd need to ask Mark if he's OK with it, but a option #3 is to add a > > patch to your series fix the regulator framework to try setting the > > voltage if _regulator_get_voltage() fails. Presumably in > > machine_constraints_voltage() you'd now do something like: > > > > int target_min, target_max; > > int current_uV = _regulator_get_voltage(rdev); > > if (current_uV < 0) { > > /* Maybe this regulator's hardware can't be read and needs to be initted */ > > _regulator_do_set_voltage( > > rdev, rdev->constraints->min_uV, rdev->constraints->min_uV); > > current_uV = _regulator_get_voltage(rdev); > > } > > if (current_uV < 0) { > > rdev_err(rdev, > > "failed to get the current voltage(%d)\n", > > current_uV); > > return current_uV; > > } > > If Mark doesn't like that then I guess I'd be OK w/ initting it to 0 > > but this needs to be documented _somewhere_ (unlike for bypass it's > > not obvious, so you need to find someplace to put it). I'd rather not > > hack the DT to deal with our software limitations. > I'm not opposed to your option #3 though it does seem a little hacky and > tailored to the qcom_rpmh-regulator specific case. Note that I think it > would be better to vote for min_uV to max_uV than min_uV to min_uV though. > Mark, what are your thoughts on the best way to handle this situation? I think that's probably only OK if we have a specific error code for the regulator being limited in this way otherwise our error handling for I/O problems involves us trying to reconfigure supplies which seems like it would be risky.
On 04/24/2018 10:45 AM, Mark Brown wrote: >>> You'd need to ask Mark if he's OK with it, but a option #3 is to add a >>> patch to your series fix the regulator framework to try setting the >>> voltage if _regulator_get_voltage() fails. Presumably in >>> machine_constraints_voltage() you'd now do something like: >>> >>> int target_min, target_max; >>> int current_uV = _regulator_get_voltage(rdev); >>> if (current_uV < 0) { >>> /* Maybe this regulator's hardware can't be read and needs to be initted */ >>> _regulator_do_set_voltage( >>> rdev, rdev->constraints->min_uV, rdev->constraints->min_uV); >>> current_uV = _regulator_get_voltage(rdev); >>> } >>> if (current_uV < 0) { >>> rdev_err(rdev, >>> "failed to get the current voltage(%d)\n", >>> current_uV); >>> return current_uV; >>> } > >>> If Mark doesn't like that then I guess I'd be OK w/ initting it to 0 >>> but this needs to be documented _somewhere_ (unlike for bypass it's >>> not obvious, so you need to find someplace to put it). I'd rather not >>> hack the DT to deal with our software limitations. > >> I'm not opposed to your option #3 though it does seem a little hacky and >> tailored to the qcom_rpmh-regulator specific case. Note that I think it >> would be better to vote for min_uV to max_uV than min_uV to min_uV though. > >> Mark, what are your thoughts on the best way to handle this situation? > > I think that's probably only OK if we have a specific error code for the > regulator being limited in this way otherwise our error handling for I/O > problems involves us trying to reconfigure supplies which seems like it > would be risky. Would you be ok with -EAGAIN being used for this purpose? Thanks, David
On Tue, Apr 24, 2018 at 02:09:47PM -0700, David Collins wrote: > On 04/24/2018 10:45 AM, Mark Brown wrote: > > I think that's probably only OK if we have a specific error code for the > > regulator being limited in this way otherwise our error handling for I/O > > problems involves us trying to reconfigure supplies which seems like it > > would be risky. > Would you be ok with -EAGAIN being used for this purpose? Using -EAGAIN for "I can't ever read the configuration from this regulator" doesn't seem right - it's not like any number of retries will ever manage to read the value back.
On Wed, Apr 25, 2018 at 02:04:56PM -0700, David Collins wrote: > > Using -EAGAIN for "I can't ever read the configuration from this > > regulator" doesn't seem right - it's not like any number of retries > > will ever manage to read the value back. > In this case, the _regulator_get_voltage() call can succeed, but only > after a voltage is explicitly requested from the framework side. The ... > Do you still have reservations about using -EAGAIN for this purpose? If > so, which error code would you suggest using? Yes, that's clearly a problem - -EAGAIN is more for situations where you can just immediately retry like signal interruptions. If the caller repetedly sits and tries to read the voltage it'll never succeed unless something else comes along and sets something.