Re: pch_uart and pch_phub clock selection

From: Greg Kroah-Hartman
Date: Thu Feb 16 2012 - 20:35:27 EST


On Thu, Feb 16, 2012 at 04:57:59PM -0800, Darren Hart wrote:
> I'm working on a tunnel creek (atom e6xx + topcliff PCH) development platform
> that uses a 48MHz or 64MHz clock to drive the pch_uart. I've found that if I
> force the uart_clock to 48MHz (or 64MHz on the latest rev) I can get the kernel
> messages and getty on the serial port.
>
> I see that the the CM-iTC board is special-cased to set a 192MHz uart_clock.
> This is done in pch_uart.c code, but there is some register manipulation done in
> the pch_phub.c driver and I don't understand the connection. How are the two
> related?
>
> Is the pch_phub.c register manipulation required for proper related? It seems to
> work without touching those registers if I just force the clock.
>
> The device I'm working with is EFI, and the dmi_get_system_info(DMI_BOARD_NAME)
> returns "(null)", so I can't use the same test to identify this board. Is there
> another common mechanism I might be able to use?

There's no relevant DMI information for the board at all? What does:
grep . /sys/class/dmi/id/*
show?

>
> The following patch (by way of example, not meant for inclusion) gets things
> working for this particular board with this command line:
>
> console=ttyPCH1,115200 pch_uart.clock_param=48000000
>
> I believe the right thing to do here is to discover a way to identify the board
> and special case the clock as is done for the CM-iTC, but I would like to
> understand the purpose of the pch_phub register manipulation code. Does this
> make sense?
>
> Thanks,
>
> Darren
>
>
> >From f83fa6cb575844d8e37f136890fe32258eb88dd2 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001
> Message-Id: <f83fa6cb575844d8e37f136890fe32258eb88dd2.1329439822.git.dvhart@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
> From: Darren Hart <dvhart@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
> Date: Wed, 15 Feb 2012 15:44:18 -0800
> Subject: [PATCH] pch_uart: Add clock parameter
>
> Allow for the specification of the clock as a module parameter. This is useful
> when a board uses a non-standard clock, or when different versions of a board
> use different clocks, and that board name or the version are not available to
> the kernel.

You also rename base_baud to uart_clock here, so you might want to
mention it in the changelog entry :)

greg k-h
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