On Thu, 2012-08-23 at 19:31 -0700, Mike Turquette wrote:Quoting Sebastian Hesselbarth (2012-07-08 10:15:26)This patch adds support for using clock gates (clk-gate) from DT basedThanks for submitting this. I'd prefer for Rob or someone with a more vested
on Rob Herrings DT clk binding support for 3.6.
It adds a helper function to clk-gate to allocate all resources required by
a set of individual clock gates, i.e. register base address and lock. Each
clock gate is described as a child of the clock-gating-control in DT and
also created by the helper function.
interest in DT to review your binding. I have some comments on the code below.
<snip>diff --git a/drivers/clk/clk-gate.c b/drivers/clk/clk-gate.c
+
+ lockp = kzalloc(sizeof(spinlock_t), GFP_KERNEL);
+ if (!lockp) {
+ pr_debug("%s: unable to allocate spinlock for %s\n",
+ __func__, np->full_name);
+ return;
+ }
+
+ spin_lock_init(lockp);
The spinlocks for the basic clock types have always been optional. This
code should reflect that and not assume the spinlock.
Also I wonder if the assumption is true that a single spinlock
corresponding to a device_node is always the right thing for every
platform. What about a 32-bit register that contains some gating bits
and a 3-bit wide field for a mux which we perform read-modify-write
operations on?
You'll have to pardon my DT ignorance. My concerns above may be totally
crazy with respect to DT.
This also requires you to split your gated clocks in seperate nodes by
register if you don't want unrelated clocks locking each other out.
Also, you need a method of 'sharing' the lock outside of the gated-clock
for use by other clock types that may share the same register.
Are you assuming that all gated-clocks will be contained within a parent
node with:
#address-cells =<1>;
#size-cells =<1>;
with no other types of clocks? This generally isn't how people are
writing their device tree files.
Looking through the current dts files, the platforms that are using
clocks to any real degree are using address=1, size=0.
The only ones I see with 1/1 are only defining a fixed-clock and don't
use the reg property anyway so could just as well be 1/0.
It might be better to pass the bit field as a separate property rather
than requiring people change their reg property to suit.
myclock {
reg =<0x0120>;
enable-bit =<22>;
};