Re: [PATCH] regulator: Update consumer state only after set voltagesucceeds.

From: Saravana Kannan
Date: Mon Dec 20 2010 - 17:27:46 EST


On 12/20/10 04:39, Mark Brown wrote:
On Fri, Dec 17, 2010 at 02:44:28PM -0800, Saravana Kannan wrote:

static int regulator_check_consumers(struct regulator_dev *rdev,
+ struct regulator *ignore,
int *min_uV, int *max_uV)

This feels really invasive, and prone to robustness issues as we're just
randomly not checking one of the consumers on a single call, meaning we
skip some checking some of the time. It's not going to make the code
more maintainable.

I agree it looks a bit odd and I'm willing to do the code reorg if there is a better way. But I definitely wouldn't call this as randomly ignoring a consumer. We are just avoiding the consumer that's changing the range from "voting twice". We already send the new request thru min/max params.

We will also need the option of not including the calling consumer when computing the min/max for the next patch. See below.

Do you have any suggestions for a better way to compute the min/max while leaving out a single consumer? I'm very much open to do that.

Would something like below be better?

regulator_check_consumers_except(rdev, ignore, min, max)
{
...
}

regulator_check_consumers(rdev, min, max)
{
regulator_check_consumer(rdev, NULL, min, max);
}


- regulator->min_uV = min_uV;
- regulator->max_uV = max_uV;
-
- ret = regulator_check_consumers(rdev,&min_uV,&max_uV);
+ ret = regulator_check_consumers(rdev, regulator,&min_uV,&max_uV);
if (ret< 0)
goto out;

ret = _regulator_do_set_voltage(rdev, min_uV, max_uV);
+ if (!ret) {
+ regulator->min_uV = min_uV;
+ regulator->max_uV = max_uV;
+ }

If you're going to do something probably unwinding the assignment on
error would cover it.

It would, but the next patch was going to be to optimize out the call to the regulator driver if the votes of the calling consumer doesn't make a difference. To do that, we will need to compute the voltage range with and without the calling consumer's min/max and then figure out if the change in the calling consumer's min/max makes a difference.

Thanks,
Saravana

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