Message ID | 1378733679-19500-2-git-send-email-mika.westerberg@linux.intel.com |
---|---|
State | Superseded |
Headers | show |
On Mon, Sep 09, 2013 at 04:34:38PM +0300, Mika Westerberg wrote: > + /* > + * Enable runtime PM for the client device. If the client wants to > + * participate on runtime PM it should call pm_runtime_put() in its > + * probe() callback. > + * > + * User still needs to allow the PM runtime before it can actually > + * happen. > + */ > + pm_runtime_forbid(&client->dev); > + pm_runtime_get_noresume(&client->dev); > + pm_runtime_set_active(&client->dev); > + pm_runtime_enable(&client->dev); How is this going to interact with client devices which are already enabling runtime PM for themselves, and what are the advantages of doing this over having the client device enable runtime PM for itself (given that the client still needs an explicit put() adding)? Given that it's relatively common for devices to have both I2C and SPI control it seems like it'd be sensible to keep the policy common between the two buses to simplify driver implementation.
On Mon, Sep 09, 2013 at 04:40:28PM +0100, Mark Brown wrote: > On Mon, Sep 09, 2013 at 04:34:38PM +0300, Mika Westerberg wrote: > > > + /* > > + * Enable runtime PM for the client device. If the client wants to > > + * participate on runtime PM it should call pm_runtime_put() in its > > + * probe() callback. > > + * > > + * User still needs to allow the PM runtime before it can actually > > + * happen. > > + */ > > + pm_runtime_forbid(&client->dev); > > + pm_runtime_get_noresume(&client->dev); > > + pm_runtime_set_active(&client->dev); > > + pm_runtime_enable(&client->dev); > > How is this going to interact with client devices which are already > enabling runtime PM for themselves, and what are the advantages of doing > this over having the client device enable runtime PM for itself (given > that the client still needs an explicit put() adding)? My understanding is that you can call pm_runtime_enable() several times (provided that pm_runtime_disable() is called as many times). So that should have no effect on the current drivers that already take advantage of runtime PM. There is one difference though -- runtime PM is now blocked by default and it needs to be unblocked from the userspace per each device. For the advantages compared to each driver handling it completely themselves: - Few lines less as you only need to call _put(). - It follows what is already been done for other buses, like PCI and AMBA . - The I2C core makes sure that the device is available (from bus point of view) when the driver ->probe() is called. > Given that it's relatively common for devices to have both I2C and SPI > control it seems like it'd be sensible to keep the policy common between > the two buses to simplify driver implementation. Yes and IMHO if I2C and SPI follows what has already been done for other buses it should make the driver writer's job easier as the usage is similar from one bus to another. -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-i2c" in the body of a message to majordomo@vger.kernel.org More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html
On Tuesday, September 10, 2013 10:51:00 AM Mika Westerberg wrote: > On Mon, Sep 09, 2013 at 04:40:28PM +0100, Mark Brown wrote: > > On Mon, Sep 09, 2013 at 04:34:38PM +0300, Mika Westerberg wrote: > > > > > + /* > > > + * Enable runtime PM for the client device. If the client wants to > > > + * participate on runtime PM it should call pm_runtime_put() in its > > > + * probe() callback. > > > + * > > > + * User still needs to allow the PM runtime before it can actually > > > + * happen. > > > + */ > > > + pm_runtime_forbid(&client->dev); > > > + pm_runtime_get_noresume(&client->dev); > > > + pm_runtime_set_active(&client->dev); > > > + pm_runtime_enable(&client->dev); > > > > How is this going to interact with client devices which are already > > enabling runtime PM for themselves, and what are the advantages of doing > > this over having the client device enable runtime PM for itself (given > > that the client still needs an explicit put() adding)? > > My understanding is that you can call pm_runtime_enable() several times > (provided that pm_runtime_disable() is called as many times). So that > should have no effect on the current drivers that already take advantage of > runtime PM. That's correct. > There is one difference though -- runtime PM is now blocked by default and > it needs to be unblocked from the userspace per each device. > > For the advantages compared to each driver handling it completely > themselves: > > - Few lines less as you only need to call _put(). > - It follows what is already been done for other buses, like PCI > and AMBA . > - The I2C core makes sure that the device is available (from bus > point of view) when the driver ->probe() is called. > > > Given that it's relatively common for devices to have both I2C and SPI > > control it seems like it'd be sensible to keep the policy common between > > the two buses to simplify driver implementation. > > Yes and IMHO if I2C and SPI follows what has already been done for other > buses it should make the driver writer's job easier as the usage is similar > from one bus to another. I agree here, FWIW. Thanks!
On Tue, Sep 10, 2013 at 10:51:00AM +0300, Mika Westerberg wrote: > On Mon, Sep 09, 2013 at 04:40:28PM +0100, Mark Brown wrote: > > How is this going to interact with client devices which are already > > enabling runtime PM for themselves, and what are the advantages of doing > > this over having the client device enable runtime PM for itself (given > > that the client still needs an explicit put() adding)? > My understanding is that you can call pm_runtime_enable() several times > (provided that pm_runtime_disable() is called as many times). So that > should have no effect on the current drivers that already take advantage of > runtime PM. Not quite... > There is one difference though -- runtime PM is now blocked by default and > it needs to be unblocked from the userspace per each device. ...as you say. This seems crazy, why on earth would we want to have userspace be forced to manually go through every single device and manually enable power saving? I can't see anyone finding that helpful and it's going to be a pain to deploy. However I had thought it was just a case of the drivers doing a put() instead of their current code to enable runtime PM (you mention that later on)? That seems both sensible and doable, though it would need doing as part of the conversion to avoid regressions and I'd expect it does mean that SPI needs to be converted at the same time. > For the advantages compared to each driver handling it completely > themselves: > - Few lines less as you only need to call _put(). > - It follows what is already been done for other buses, like PCI > and AMBA . > - The I2C core makes sure that the device is available (from bus > point of view) when the driver ->probe() is called. I can't understand your last point here at all, sorry. Can you expand please? > > Given that it's relatively common for devices to have both I2C and SPI > > control it seems like it'd be sensible to keep the policy common between > > the two buses to simplify driver implementation. > Yes and IMHO if I2C and SPI follows what has already been done for other > buses it should make the driver writer's job easier as the usage is similar > from one bus to another. So then the obvious followup question is why this is even something that needs to be implemented per bus? Shouldn't we be enhancing the driver core to do this, or is that the long term plan and this is a step on the road to doing that?
On Tue, Sep 10, 2013 at 01:27:54PM +0100, Mark Brown wrote: > On Tue, Sep 10, 2013 at 10:51:00AM +0300, Mika Westerberg wrote: > > On Mon, Sep 09, 2013 at 04:40:28PM +0100, Mark Brown wrote: > > > > How is this going to interact with client devices which are already > > > enabling runtime PM for themselves, and what are the advantages of doing > > > this over having the client device enable runtime PM for itself (given > > > that the client still needs an explicit put() adding)? > > > My understanding is that you can call pm_runtime_enable() several times > > (provided that pm_runtime_disable() is called as many times). So that > > should have no effect on the current drivers that already take advantage of > > runtime PM. > > Not quite... > > > There is one difference though -- runtime PM is now blocked by default and > > it needs to be unblocked from the userspace per each device. > > ...as you say. > > This seems crazy, why on earth would we want to have userspace be forced > to manually go through every single device and manually enable power > saving? I can't see anyone finding that helpful and it's going to be a > pain to deploy. There are things like HID over I2C devices (e.g touch screen) where going to lower power states too aggressively makes the touch experience really sluggish. However, other HID over I2C devices like sensor hubs it doesn't matter that much. In order to get the best performance we have runtime PM blocked by default (and leave it up to the user to unblock to get power savings). That's basically what PCI drivers currently do. > However I had thought it was just a case of the drivers doing a put() > instead of their current code to enable runtime PM (you mention that > later on)? User still needs to unblock runtime PM for the device. The driver can call the runtime PM functions but they don't have any effect until runtime PM is unblocked by the user. However, I don't have problems dropping the call to pm_runtime_forbid() in this patch and leave it up to the user to decide whether runtime PM should be blocked for the device. > That seems both sensible and doable, though it would need > doing as part of the conversion to avoid regressions and I'd expect it > does mean that SPI needs to be converted at the same time. OK. > > For the advantages compared to each driver handling it completely > > themselves: > > > - Few lines less as you only need to call _put(). > > - It follows what is already been done for other buses, like PCI > > and AMBA . > > - The I2C core makes sure that the device is available (from bus > > point of view) when the driver ->probe() is called. > > I can't understand your last point here at all, sorry. Can you expand > please? Sorry about that. At least with ACPI enumerated I2C client devices, they might be powered off by the BIOS (there are power resources attached to the devices). So when the driver ->probe() is called we can't access the device's registers etc. So we bind the device to the ACPI power domain (the second patch in this series) and then call pm_runtime_get() for the device. That makes sure that the device is accessible when ->probe() is called. > > > > Given that it's relatively common for devices to have both I2C and SPI > > > control it seems like it'd be sensible to keep the policy common between > > > the two buses to simplify driver implementation. > > > Yes and IMHO if I2C and SPI follows what has already been done for other > > buses it should make the driver writer's job easier as the usage is similar > > from one bus to another. > > So then the obvious followup question is why this is even something that > needs to be implemented per bus? Shouldn't we be enhancing the driver > core to do this, or is that the long term plan and this is a step on the > road to doing that? If we end up all buses implementing the same mechanism, I think it makes sense to move it to the driver core. -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-i2c" in the body of a message to majordomo@vger.kernel.org More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html
On Tue, Sep 10, 2013 at 05:26:31PM +0300, Mika Westerberg wrote: > On Tue, Sep 10, 2013 at 01:27:54PM +0100, Mark Brown wrote: > > > There is one difference though -- runtime PM is now blocked by default and > > > it needs to be unblocked from the userspace per each device. > > ...as you say. > > This seems crazy, why on earth would we want to have userspace be forced > > to manually go through every single device and manually enable power > > saving? I can't see anyone finding that helpful and it's going to be a > > pain to deploy. > There are things like HID over I2C devices (e.g touch screen) where going > to lower power states too aggressively makes the touch experience really > sluggish. However, other HID over I2C devices like sensor hubs it doesn't > matter that much. In order to get the best performance we have runtime PM > blocked by default (and leave it up to the user to unblock to get power > savings). > That's basically what PCI drivers currently do. So those specific devices need to implement runtime PM in an appropriate fashion. That's no need to implement a poor default for every single device to work around poor implementations from some, especially when it requires a userspace update to get acceptable performance again from the unaffected devices. > > However I had thought it was just a case of the drivers doing a put() > > instead of their current code to enable runtime PM (you mention that > > later on)? > User still needs to unblock runtime PM for the device. The driver can call > the runtime PM functions but they don't have any effect until runtime PM is > unblocked by the user. > However, I don't have problems dropping the call to pm_runtime_forbid() in > this patch and leave it up to the user to decide whether runtime PM should > be blocked for the device. I think this is essential - we can't really go around forcing userspace updates to restore runtime power management, nobody is going to thank us for that and it sounds like the issue you're trying to solve is device specific anyway. > > > - The I2C core makes sure that the device is available (from bus > > > point of view) when the driver ->probe() is called. > > I can't understand your last point here at all, sorry. Can you expand > > please? > Sorry about that. > At least with ACPI enumerated I2C client devices, they might be powered off > by the BIOS (there are power resources attached to the devices). So when > the driver ->probe() is called we can't access the device's registers etc. > So we bind the device to the ACPI power domain (the second patch in this > series) and then call pm_runtime_get() for the device. That makes sure that > the device is accessible when ->probe() is called. OK, that is very much not the model which embedded systems follow, in embedded systems the driver for the device is fully in control of its own power. It gets resources like GPIOs and regulators which allow it to make fine grained decisions. > > So then the obvious followup question is why this is even something that > > needs to be implemented per bus? Shouldn't we be enhancing the driver > > core to do this, or is that the long term plan and this is a step on the > > road to doing that? > If we end up all buses implementing the same mechanism, I think it makes > sense to move it to the driver core. If we're starting to get a reasonable number of buses following the same pattern it seems like we're in a position to start
On Tuesday, September 10, 2013 05:13:21 PM Mark Brown wrote: > On Tue, Sep 10, 2013 at 05:26:31PM +0300, Mika Westerberg wrote: > > On Tue, Sep 10, 2013 at 01:27:54PM +0100, Mark Brown wrote: > > > > > There is one difference though -- runtime PM is now blocked by default and > > > > it needs to be unblocked from the userspace per each device. > > > > ...as you say. > > > > This seems crazy, why on earth would we want to have userspace be forced > > > to manually go through every single device and manually enable power > > > saving? I can't see anyone finding that helpful and it's going to be a > > > pain to deploy. > > > There are things like HID over I2C devices (e.g touch screen) where going > > to lower power states too aggressively makes the touch experience really > > sluggish. However, other HID over I2C devices like sensor hubs it doesn't > > matter that much. In order to get the best performance we have runtime PM > > blocked by default (and leave it up to the user to unblock to get power > > savings). > > > That's basically what PCI drivers currently do. > > So those specific devices need to implement runtime PM in an appropriate > fashion. That's no need to implement a poor default for every single > device to work around poor implementations from some, especially when it > requires a userspace update to get acceptable performance again from the > unaffected devices. > > > > However I had thought it was just a case of the drivers doing a put() > > > instead of their current code to enable runtime PM (you mention that > > > later on)? > > > User still needs to unblock runtime PM for the device. The driver can call > > the runtime PM functions but they don't have any effect until runtime PM is > > unblocked by the user. > > > However, I don't have problems dropping the call to pm_runtime_forbid() in > > this patch and leave it up to the user to decide whether runtime PM should > > be blocked for the device. > > I think this is essential - we can't really go around forcing userspace > updates to restore runtime power management, nobody is going to thank us > for that and it sounds like the issue you're trying to solve is device > specific anyway. In fact, that's all about what the default should be, because user space can very easily change it either way (it takes one loop in shell code to do that for all devices on the given bus). And I'm fine with defaulting to "auto". > > > > - The I2C core makes sure that the device is available (from bus > > > > point of view) when the driver ->probe() is called. > > > > I can't understand your last point here at all, sorry. Can you expand > > > please? > > > Sorry about that. > > > At least with ACPI enumerated I2C client devices, they might be powered off > > by the BIOS (there are power resources attached to the devices). So when > > the driver ->probe() is called we can't access the device's registers etc. > > > So we bind the device to the ACPI power domain (the second patch in this > > series) and then call pm_runtime_get() for the device. That makes sure that > > the device is accessible when ->probe() is called. > > OK, that is very much not the model which embedded systems follow, in > embedded systems the driver for the device is fully in control of its > own power. It gets resources like GPIOs and regulators which allow it > to make fine grained decisions. There are platforms where those resources are simply not available for direct manipulation and we need to use ACPI methods for power management. Now, since those methods are used in pretty much the same way for all I2C devices, we add a PM domain for that to avoid duplicating the same code in all of the drivers in question (patch [2/2]). Does that make sense to you? > > > So then the obvious followup question is why this is even something that > > > needs to be implemented per bus? Shouldn't we be enhancing the driver > > > core to do this, or is that the long term plan and this is a step on the > > > road to doing that? > > > If we end up all buses implementing the same mechanism, I think it makes > > sense to move it to the driver core. > > If we're starting to get a reasonable number of buses following the same > pattern it seems like we're in a position to start We need that for exactly 3 buses: platform (already done), I2C and SPI. No other bus types are going to use ACPI this way for PM, at least for the time being, simply because PCI, USB and SATA/IDE have their own ways of doing this (which are bus-specific) and the spec doesn't cover other bus types directly (it defines support for UART, but we don't have a UART bus type). Moreover, because PCI and USB use ACPI for PM in their own ways, moving that thing up to the driver core would be rather inconvenient. Thanks, Rafael -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-i2c" in the body of a message to majordomo@vger.kernel.org More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html
On Tue, Sep 10, 2013 at 10:04:21PM +0200, Rafael J. Wysocki wrote: > On Tuesday, September 10, 2013 05:13:21 PM Mark Brown wrote: > > OK, that is very much not the model which embedded systems follow, in > > embedded systems the driver for the device is fully in control of its > > own power. It gets resources like GPIOs and regulators which allow it > > to make fine grained decisions. > There are platforms where those resources are simply not available for > direct manipulation and we need to use ACPI methods for power management. > Now, since those methods are used in pretty much the same way for all I2C > devices, we add a PM domain for that to avoid duplicating the same code in > all of the drivers in question (patch [2/2]). Does that make sense to you? It doesn't seem like a particular problem, but the existing usage does need to be preserved for the systems that use it so things like having auto as the default and updating the drivers seem like they're needed. > > If we're starting to get a reasonable number of buses following the same > > pattern it seems like we're in a position to start > We need that for exactly 3 buses: platform (already done), I2C and SPI. > No other bus types are going to use ACPI this way for PM, at least for the > time being, simply because PCI, USB and SATA/IDE have their own ways of doing > this (which are bus-specific) and the spec doesn't cover other bus types > directly (it defines support for UART, but we don't have a UART bus type). > Moreover, because PCI and USB use ACPI for PM in their own ways, moving that > thing up to the driver core would be rather inconvenient. That only applies to the power domains though, what Mika was saying was that the process for enabling runtime PM (just drop a reference) also becomes easier with this method regardless of anything else - that makes sense to me as something we might want to end up with so do we want to just move towards making that a default?
On Tuesday, September 10, 2013 10:35:22 PM Mark Brown wrote: > On Tue, Sep 10, 2013 at 10:04:21PM +0200, Rafael J. Wysocki wrote: > > On Tuesday, September 10, 2013 05:13:21 PM Mark Brown wrote: > > > > OK, that is very much not the model which embedded systems follow, in > > > embedded systems the driver for the device is fully in control of its > > > own power. It gets resources like GPIOs and regulators which allow it > > > to make fine grained decisions. > > > There are platforms where those resources are simply not available for > > direct manipulation and we need to use ACPI methods for power management. > > > Now, since those methods are used in pretty much the same way for all I2C > > devices, we add a PM domain for that to avoid duplicating the same code in > > all of the drivers in question (patch [2/2]). Does that make sense to you? > > It doesn't seem like a particular problem, but the existing usage does > need to be preserved for the systems that use it so things like having > auto as the default and updating the drivers seem like they're needed. > > > > If we're starting to get a reasonable number of buses following the same > > > pattern it seems like we're in a position to start > > > We need that for exactly 3 buses: platform (already done), I2C and SPI. > > > No other bus types are going to use ACPI this way for PM, at least for the > > time being, simply because PCI, USB and SATA/IDE have their own ways of doing > > this (which are bus-specific) and the spec doesn't cover other bus types > > directly (it defines support for UART, but we don't have a UART bus type). > > > Moreover, because PCI and USB use ACPI for PM in their own ways, moving that > > thing up to the driver core would be rather inconvenient. > > That only applies to the power domains though, what Mika was saying was > that the process for enabling runtime PM (just drop a reference) also > becomes easier with this method regardless of anything else - that makes > sense to me as something we might want to end up with so do we want to > just move towards making that a default? Possibly. :-) At least I don't see any fundamental obstacles ...
On 09/11/2013 06:32 AM, Rafael J. Wysocki wrote: > On Tuesday, September 10, 2013 10:35:22 PM Mark Brown wrote: >> On Tue, Sep 10, 2013 at 10:04:21PM +0200, Rafael J. Wysocki wrote: >>> On Tuesday, September 10, 2013 05:13:21 PM Mark Brown wrote: >> >>>> OK, that is very much not the model which embedded systems follow, in >>>> embedded systems the driver for the device is fully in control of its >>>> own power. It gets resources like GPIOs and regulators which allow it >>>> to make fine grained decisions. >> >>> There are platforms where those resources are simply not available for >>> direct manipulation and we need to use ACPI methods for power management. >> >>> Now, since those methods are used in pretty much the same way for all I2C >>> devices, we add a PM domain for that to avoid duplicating the same code in >>> all of the drivers in question (patch [2/2]). Does that make sense to you? >> >> It doesn't seem like a particular problem, but the existing usage does >> need to be preserved for the systems that use it so things like having >> auto as the default and updating the drivers seem like they're needed. >> >>>> If we're starting to get a reasonable number of buses following the same >>>> pattern it seems like we're in a position to start >> >>> We need that for exactly 3 buses: platform (already done), I2C and SPI. >> >>> No other bus types are going to use ACPI this way for PM, at least for the >>> time being, simply because PCI, USB and SATA/IDE have their own ways of doing >>> this (which are bus-specific) and the spec doesn't cover other bus types >>> directly (it defines support for UART, but we don't have a UART bus type). >> >>> Moreover, because PCI and USB use ACPI for PM in their own ways, moving that >>> thing up to the driver core would be rather inconvenient. >> >> That only applies to the power domains though, what Mika was saying was >> that the process for enabling runtime PM (just drop a reference) also >> becomes easier with this method regardless of anything else - that makes >> sense to me as something we might want to end up with so do we want to >> just move towards making that a default? > > Possibly. :-) > > At least I don't see any fundamental obstacles ... Looks like, it all boils down to how many I2C devices should be allowed for runtime PM by default and how many I2C devices should be forbidden. , and then we allow/forbid runtime PM for the majority case in I2C core while individual driver can still forbid/allow it in their own code. So if the majority case is runtime PM should be allowed by default, I'm also OK to not forbid runtime PM for I2C client device in I2C core. My original intention to forbid runtime PM by default is to make sure no adverse effect would occur to some I2C devices that used to work well before runtime PM. Thanks, Aaron -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-i2c" in the body of a message to majordomo@vger.kernel.org More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html
On Wed, Sep 11, 2013 at 09:01:16AM +0800, Aaron Lu wrote: > Looks like, it all boils down to how many I2C devices should be allowed > for runtime PM by default and how many I2C devices should be forbidden. > , and then we allow/forbid runtime PM for the majority case in I2C core > while individual driver can still forbid/allow it in their own code. > So if the majority case is runtime PM should be allowed by default, I'm > also OK to not forbid runtime PM for I2C client device in I2C core. My > original intention to forbid runtime PM by default is to make sure no > adverse effect would occur to some I2C devices that used to work well > before runtime PM. The really big problem here is that there are I2C devices currently using runtime PM quite happily and forbidding it by default will break them. In general though requiring userspace to manually activate power saving features isn't going to make people happy.
On Wed, Sep 11, 2013 at 10:55:52AM +0100, Mark Brown wrote: > On Wed, Sep 11, 2013 at 09:01:16AM +0800, Aaron Lu wrote: > > > Looks like, it all boils down to how many I2C devices should be allowed > > for runtime PM by default and how many I2C devices should be forbidden. > > , and then we allow/forbid runtime PM for the majority case in I2C core > > while individual driver can still forbid/allow it in their own code. > > > So if the majority case is runtime PM should be allowed by default, I'm > > also OK to not forbid runtime PM for I2C client device in I2C core. My > > original intention to forbid runtime PM by default is to make sure no > > adverse effect would occur to some I2C devices that used to work well > > before runtime PM. > > The really big problem here is that there are I2C devices currently > using runtime PM quite happily and forbidding it by default will break > them. > > In general though requiring userspace to manually activate power saving > features isn't going to make people happy. Yeah, we are going change that in the next revision (default to RPM unblocked). I'll also look into converting the existing I2C client drivers to use this method. One question, though, is it better to have the conversion in the same patch that introduces the I2C core runtime PM change or as a separate patch? -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-i2c" in the body of a message to majordomo@vger.kernel.org More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html
On Wed, Sep 11, 2013 at 02:05:43PM +0300, Mika Westerberg wrote: > I'll also look into converting the existing I2C client drivers to use this > method. One question, though, is it better to have the conversion in the > same patch that introduces the I2C core runtime PM change or as a separate > patch? In theory it ought to be part of the same patch but in practice a brief bit of bisection breakage on a single branch is probably worth the ease of review from my point of view, others may disagree though. Like I say I think you'll need to convert SPI at the same time due to the devices with both buses sharing code.
On Wed, Sep 11, 2013 at 12:14:09PM +0100, Mark Brown wrote: > On Wed, Sep 11, 2013 at 02:05:43PM +0300, Mika Westerberg wrote: > > > I'll also look into converting the existing I2C client drivers to use this > > method. One question, though, is it better to have the conversion in the > > same patch that introduces the I2C core runtime PM change or as a separate > > patch? > > In theory it ought to be part of the same patch but in practice a brief > bit of bisection breakage on a single branch is probably worth the ease > of review from my point of view, others may disagree though. OK, I'll keep them separate, unless there are objections. > Like I say I think you'll need to convert SPI at the same time due to the > devices with both buses sharing code. Yes, I'm looking into that :) -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-i2c" in the body of a message to majordomo@vger.kernel.org More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html
Aaron Lu <aaron.lu@intel.com> writes: > On 09/11/2013 06:32 AM, Rafael J. Wysocki wrote: >> On Tuesday, September 10, 2013 10:35:22 PM Mark Brown wrote: >>> On Tue, Sep 10, 2013 at 10:04:21PM +0200, Rafael J. Wysocki wrote: >>>> On Tuesday, September 10, 2013 05:13:21 PM Mark Brown wrote: >>> >>>>> OK, that is very much not the model which embedded systems follow, in >>>>> embedded systems the driver for the device is fully in control of its >>>>> own power. It gets resources like GPIOs and regulators which allow it >>>>> to make fine grained decisions. >>> >>>> There are platforms where those resources are simply not available for >>>> direct manipulation and we need to use ACPI methods for power management. >>> >>>> Now, since those methods are used in pretty much the same way for all I2C >>>> devices, we add a PM domain for that to avoid duplicating the same code in >>>> all of the drivers in question (patch [2/2]). Does that make sense to you? >>> >>> It doesn't seem like a particular problem, but the existing usage does >>> need to be preserved for the systems that use it so things like having >>> auto as the default and updating the drivers seem like they're needed. >>> >>>>> If we're starting to get a reasonable number of buses following the same >>>>> pattern it seems like we're in a position to start >>> >>>> We need that for exactly 3 buses: platform (already done), I2C and SPI. >>> >>>> No other bus types are going to use ACPI this way for PM, at least for the >>>> time being, simply because PCI, USB and SATA/IDE have their own ways of doing >>>> this (which are bus-specific) and the spec doesn't cover other bus types >>>> directly (it defines support for UART, but we don't have a UART bus type). >>> >>>> Moreover, because PCI and USB use ACPI for PM in their own ways, moving that >>>> thing up to the driver core would be rather inconvenient. >>> >>> That only applies to the power domains though, what Mika was saying was >>> that the process for enabling runtime PM (just drop a reference) also >>> becomes easier with this method regardless of anything else - that makes >>> sense to me as something we might want to end up with so do we want to >>> just move towards making that a default? >> >> Possibly. :-) >> >> At least I don't see any fundamental obstacles ... > > Looks like, it all boils down to how many I2C devices should be allowed > for runtime PM by default and how many I2C devices should be forbidden. > , and then we allow/forbid runtime PM for the majority case in I2C core > while individual driver can still forbid/allow it in their own code. > > So if the majority case is runtime PM should be allowed by default, I'm > also OK to not forbid runtime PM for I2C client device in I2C core. My > original intention to forbid runtime PM by default is to make sure no > adverse effect would occur to some I2C devices that used to work well > before runtime PM. IMO, this decision belongs to the PM domain, not to the core. We have an established legacy with the current core default (auto) and changing that means lots of breakage. The "forbid by default" can just as easily be handled in the PM domain for the group of devices that need it, so why not do it there? Kevin -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-i2c" in the body of a message to majordomo@vger.kernel.org More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html
On Thu, Sep 12, 2013 at 02:07:48PM -0700, Kevin Hilman wrote: > IMO, this decision belongs to the PM domain, not to the core. We have > an established legacy with the current core default (auto) and changing > that means lots of breakage. Yup. > The "forbid by default" can just as easily be handled in the PM domain > for the group of devices that need it, so why not do it there? Or at the device level - I'd guess most I2C devices won't end up in a domain outside of ACPI. Mika's latest version of the patches address this issue, the default is left alone.
diff --git a/drivers/i2c/i2c-core.c b/drivers/i2c/i2c-core.c index 3d44292..8fad5ac 100644 --- a/drivers/i2c/i2c-core.c +++ b/drivers/i2c/i2c-core.c @@ -254,11 +254,34 @@ static int i2c_device_probe(struct device *dev) client->flags & I2C_CLIENT_WAKE); dev_dbg(dev, "probe\n"); + /* Make sure the adapter is active */ + pm_runtime_get_sync(&client->adapter->dev); + + /* + * Enable runtime PM for the client device. If the client wants to + * participate on runtime PM it should call pm_runtime_put() in its + * probe() callback. + * + * User still needs to allow the PM runtime before it can actually + * happen. + */ + pm_runtime_forbid(&client->dev); + pm_runtime_get_noresume(&client->dev); + pm_runtime_set_active(&client->dev); + pm_runtime_enable(&client->dev); + status = driver->probe(client, i2c_match_id(driver->id_table, client)); if (status) { client->driver = NULL; i2c_set_clientdata(client, NULL); + + pm_runtime_disable(&client->dev); + pm_runtime_set_suspended(&client->dev); + pm_runtime_put_noidle(&client->dev); } + + pm_runtime_put(&client->adapter->dev); + return status; } @@ -271,6 +294,8 @@ static int i2c_device_remove(struct device *dev) if (!client || !dev->driver) return 0; + pm_runtime_get_sync(&client->adapter->dev); + driver = to_i2c_driver(dev->driver); if (driver->remove) { dev_dbg(dev, "remove\n"); @@ -283,6 +308,13 @@ static int i2c_device_remove(struct device *dev) client->driver = NULL; i2c_set_clientdata(client, NULL); } + + /* Undo the runtime PM done in i2c_probe() */ + pm_runtime_disable(&client->dev); + pm_runtime_set_suspended(&client->dev); + pm_runtime_put_noidle(&client->dev); + + pm_runtime_put(&client->adapter->dev); return status; } @@ -294,8 +326,11 @@ static void i2c_device_shutdown(struct device *dev) if (!client || !dev->driver) return; driver = to_i2c_driver(dev->driver); - if (driver->shutdown) + if (driver->shutdown) { + pm_runtime_get_sync(&client->adapter->dev); driver->shutdown(client); + pm_runtime_put(&client->adapter->dev); + } } #ifdef CONFIG_PM_SLEEP @@ -1263,6 +1298,15 @@ exit_recovery: bus_for_each_drv(&i2c_bus_type, NULL, adap, __process_new_adapter); mutex_unlock(&core_lock); + /* + * Make sure the adapter runtime PM follows the parent device (the + * host controller) so that we can suspend it once there aren't any + * active clients anymore. + */ + pm_runtime_set_active(&adap->dev); + pm_runtime_no_callbacks(&adap->dev); + pm_runtime_enable(&adap->dev); + return 0; out_list: @@ -1427,6 +1471,8 @@ void i2c_del_adapter(struct i2c_adapter *adap) return; } + pm_runtime_disable(&adap->dev); + /* Tell drivers about this removal */ mutex_lock(&core_lock); bus_for_each_drv(&i2c_bus_type, NULL, adap,