Message ID | 490A84F8.20403@consentry.com (mailing list archive) |
---|---|
State | Superseded, archived |
Headers | show |
Hi Mike, > This patch adds the ability to enable the digital filter in the device > tree (with the "clock-filter" boolean property) and automates the > predivider selection according to the clock-frequency and clock-filter > properties. looks good. David, is "clock-filter" an appropriate dts property for this purpose or would you prefer a different name? What needs to be done though is to document this change in Documentation/powerpc/dts-bindings/fsl/cpm_qe/cpm/i2c.txt. Thanks, Jochen
On Fri, Oct 31, 2008 at 12:40:47PM +0100, Jochen Friedrich wrote: > Hi Mike, > > > This patch adds the ability to enable the digital filter in the device > > tree (with the "clock-filter" boolean property) and automates the > > predivider selection according to the clock-frequency and clock-filter > > properties. > > looks good. > > David, is "clock-filter" an appropriate dts property for this purpose or > would you prefer a different name? Hrm, well the name seems fine, but then, device-specific properties are device-specific so it's pretty much up to the device binding to pick a name. What does worry me, however, is the description says it's about whether the driver "should" enable the filter. Generally the device tree doesn't attempt to say what users "should" do with the hardware, just what the characteristics of the hardware are. What's the underlying difference here that affects the driver's choice to enable the filter or not?
David Gibson wrote: > What does worry me, however, is the description says it's about > whether the driver "should" enable the filter. Generally the device > tree doesn't attempt to say what users "should" do with the hardware, > just what the characteristics of the hardware are. > > What's the underlying difference here that affects the driver's choice > to enable the filter or not? I think it's a hardware/environment design parameter - e.g. if the I2C bus has hot-pluggable devices, long PCB traces, or a hierarchy of multiplexed bus segments, these can result in a noisy SCL signal that needs to be filtered. It's also a recommended mitigation for errata in certain CPU revs. -=] Mike [=-
On Wed, Nov 05, 2008 at 04:35:03PM -0800, Mike Ditto wrote: > David Gibson wrote: > > What does worry me, however, is the description says it's about > > whether the driver "should" enable the filter. Generally the device > > tree doesn't attempt to say what users "should" do with the hardware, > > just what the characteristics of the hardware are. > > > > What's the underlying difference here that affects the driver's choice > > to enable the filter or not? > > I think it's a hardware/environment design parameter - e.g. if the I2C > bus has hot-pluggable devices, long PCB traces, or a hierarchy of > multiplexed bus segments, these can result in a noisy SCL signal that > needs to be filtered. It's also a recommended mitigation for errata > in certain CPU revs. Ah, ok. Well the CPU revision thing could be selected based on the CPU revision, but the other conditions are a property of the board wiring. Obviously it's hard to precisely characterize what it says about the hardware, which is usually best avoided for devtree properties, but I can see why this is more-or-less unavoidable in this case. Ok. This property name and meaning looks ok to me. I would suggest a note in the binding roughly explaining what leads to the property being set (basically what you just told me in the paragraph above).
[including extra context because some of the thread went to the wrong I2C list] David Gibson wrote: > On Wed, Nov 05, 2008 at 04:35:03PM -0800, Mike Ditto wrote: >> David Gibson wrote: >> > What does worry me, however, is the description says it's about >> > whether the driver "should" enable the filter. Generally the device >> > tree doesn't attempt to say what users "should" do with the hardware, >> > just what the characteristics of the hardware are. >> > >> > What's the underlying difference here that affects the driver's choice >> > to enable the filter or not? >> >> I think it's a hardware/environment design parameter - e.g. if the I2C >> bus has hot-pluggable devices, long PCB traces, or a hierarchy of >> multiplexed bus segments, these can result in a noisy SCL signal that >> needs to be filtered. It's also a recommended mitigation for errata >> in certain CPU revs. > > Ah, ok. Well the CPU revision thing could be selected based on the > CPU revision, but the other conditions are a property of the board > wiring. Obviously it's hard to precisely characterize what it says > about the hardware, which is usually best avoided for devtree > properties, but I can see why this is more-or-less unavoidable in this > case. > > Ok. This property name and meaning looks ok to me. I would suggest a > note in the binding roughly explaining what leads to the property > being set (basically what you just told me in the paragraph above). Will do. I'll send a revised patch shortly. Thanks, -=] Mike [=-
Index: linux/drivers/i2c/busses/i2c-cpm.c =================================================================== RCS file: /n/home2/mditto/ws/myrepo/kernel/linux/drivers/i2c/busses/i2c-cpm.c,v retrieving revision 1.1.1.1 diff -u -p -r1.1.1.1 i2c-cpm.c --- linux/drivers/i2c/busses/i2c-cpm.c 11 Oct 2008 02:53:07 -0000 1.1.1.1 +++ linux/drivers/i2c/busses/i2c-cpm.c 31 Oct 2008 04:05:41 -0000 @@ -87,6 +87,11 @@ struct i2c_ram { #define I2CER_TXB 0x02 #define I2CER_RXB 0x01 #define I2MOD_EN 0x01 +#define I2MOD_PDIV_32 0x00 /* BRGCLK/32 */ +#define I2MOD_PDIV_16 0x02 /* BRGCLK/16 */ +#define I2MOD_PDIV_8 0x04 /* BRGCLK/8 */ +#define I2MOD_PDIV_4 0x06 /* BRGCLK/4 */ +#define I2MOD_FLT 0x08 /* I2C Registers */ struct i2c_reg { @@ -111,7 +116,6 @@ struct cpm_i2c { int version; /* CPM1=1, CPM2=2 */ int irq; int cp_command; - int freq; struct i2c_reg __iomem *i2c_reg; struct i2c_ram __iomem *i2c_ram; u16 i2c_addr; @@ -434,7 +438,8 @@ static int __devinit cpm_i2c_setup(struc void __iomem *i2c_base; cbd_t __iomem *tbdf; cbd_t __iomem *rbdf; - unsigned char brg; + uint freq, maxfreq, prediv; + unsigned char mod, brg; dev_dbg(&cpm->ofdev->dev, "cpm_i2c_setup()\n"); @@ -508,9 +513,15 @@ static int __devinit cpm_i2c_setup(struc data = of_get_property(ofdev->node, "clock-frequency", &len); if (data && len == 4) - cpm->freq = *data; + freq = *data; else - cpm->freq = 60000; /* use 60kHz i2c clock by default */ + freq = 60000; /* use 60kHz I2C clock by default */ + + data = of_get_property(ofdev->node, "clock-filter", &len); + if (data && len == 0) + mod = I2MOD_FLT; + else + mod = 0; /* * Allocate space for CPM_MAXBD transmit and receive buffer @@ -552,8 +563,8 @@ static int __devinit cpm_i2c_setup(struc cpm_reset_i2c_params(cpm); - dev_dbg(&cpm->ofdev->dev, "i2c_ram 0x%p, i2c_addr 0x%04x, freq %d\n", - cpm->i2c_ram, cpm->i2c_addr, cpm->freq); + dev_dbg(&cpm->ofdev->dev, "i2c_ram 0x%p, i2c_addr 0x%04x, freq %u\n", + cpm->i2c_ram, cpm->i2c_addr, freq); dev_dbg(&cpm->ofdev->dev, "tbase 0x%04x, rbase 0x%04x\n", (u8 __iomem *)cpm->tbase - DPRAM_BASE, (u8 __iomem *)cpm->rbase - DPRAM_BASE); @@ -566,20 +577,53 @@ static int __devinit cpm_i2c_setup(struc out_8(&cpm->i2c_reg->i2add, 0x7f << 1); /* - * PDIV is set to 00 in i2mod, so brgclk/32 is used as input to the - * i2c baud rate generator. This is divided by 2 x (DIV + 3) to get - * the actual i2c bus frequency. + * Compute the clock predivider and final divider to generate something + * close to the desired I2C clock frequency. Use the largest predivider + * possible. i2brg must be >= 6 when using I2MOD_FLT, otherwise >= 3. + * So compute the highest frequency that will work with I2MOD_PDIV_32; + * if that isn't high enough, see if we can use I2MOD_PDIV_16, etc. + * Then choose a final divider that will generate at least the desired + * clock frequency. Note the "at least" -- this rounds upward, not + * toward the nearest available frequency. + * + * I2C frequency for a given predivider and i2brg value is: + * i2cfreq = brgfreq / prediv / 2 / (i2brg + 3 + 2 * flt) + * i2brg value for a given predivider and I2C frequency is: + * i2brg = (brgfreq / prediv / 2 / i2cfreq) - 3 - 2 * flt + * minimum allowed i2brg is (3 + 3 * flt). + * maximum freq possible for a given predivider is: + * maxfreq = brgfreq / prediv / 2 / (3 + 3 + 5 * flt) */ - brg = get_brgfreq() / (32 * 2 * cpm->freq) - 3; - out_8(&cpm->i2c_reg->i2brg, brg); + maxfreq = get_brgfreq() / 64 / ((mod & I2MOD_FLT) ? 11 : 6); + if (freq <= maxfreq) { /* Works with predivider 32? */ + mod |= I2MOD_PDIV_32; + prediv = 32; + } else if (freq <= maxfreq*2) { /* How about 16? */ + mod |= I2MOD_PDIV_16; + prediv = 16; + } else if (freq <= maxfreq*4) { /* How about 8? */ + mod |= I2MOD_PDIV_8; + prediv = 8; + } else { /* 4 is last resort. */ + if (freq > maxfreq*8) + /* Impossibly high clock-frequency requested. */ + freq = maxfreq*8; + mod |= I2MOD_PDIV_4; + prediv = 4; + } + brg = get_brgfreq() / prediv / 2 / freq - ((mod & I2MOD_FLT) ? 5 : 3); - out_8(&cpm->i2c_reg->i2mod, 0x00); + out_8(&cpm->i2c_reg->i2brg, brg); + out_8(&cpm->i2c_reg->i2mod, mod); out_8(&cpm->i2c_reg->i2com, I2COM_MASTER); /* Master mode */ /* Disable interrupts. */ out_8(&cpm->i2c_reg->i2cmr, 0); out_8(&cpm->i2c_reg->i2cer, 0xff); + freq = get_brgfreq() / prediv / 2 / (brg + ((mod & I2MOD_FLT) ? 5 : 3)); + dev_dbg(&cpm->ofdev->dev, "i2mod 0x%02x, i2brg %u, actual freq %u\n", + mod, brg, freq); return 0; out_muram:
This patch adds the ability to enable the digital filter in the device tree (with the "clock-filter" boolean property) and automates the predivider selection according to the clock-frequency and clock-filter properties. Signed-off-by: Mike Ditto <mditto@consentry.com> --- This patch is against 2.6.27. To use the full range of I2C clock frequencies supported by the Freescale CPM I2C controller, it is necessary to choose an appropriate predivider value. The choice is affected by whether the SCL signal digital filter is enabled. The existing code computes the final divider (i2brg) but always uses a predivider of 32. This can set illegal values in i2brg - for example on a machine with 25 MHz BRG_CLK, when selecting I2C clock-frequency 97656 Hz, the code was loading i2brg with the value 1, which does not work (the CPM requires a minimum value of 3 when the digital filter is not enabled). Additionally, the calculation did not work when the filter is enabled (and the driver did not provide a way to enable it). And by the way, thanks to Jochen Friedrich for integrating this driver on the very day that I went looking for it. :-)