Re: [PATCH] cpufreq: cpufreq-cpu0: Use a sane boot frequency whenbooting with a mismatched bootloader configuration
From: Nishanth Menon
Date: Tue Nov 19 2013 - 09:59:58 EST
On 11/19/2013 08:26 AM, Viresh Kumar wrote:
> On 19 November 2013 19:46, Nishanth Menon <nm@xxxxxx> wrote:
>> Consider something like userspace governor selection -> the device at
>> boot will probably remain in an unknown/"invalid" configuration till
>> the very first transition attempt. I am less worried about the stats
>> than not following what the hardware description is (as stated by
>> device tree/other forms).
>>
>> I staunchly disagree that at a point of mismatch detection, we just
>> refuse to load up cpufreq governor -even though we know from device
>> tree/other alternative entries what the hardware behavior is supposed
>> to be. To refuse to loadup to a known configuration is considering the
>> "valid configuration" data provided to the driver is wrong - an
>> equivalent(considering the i2c example) is that if i2c driver sees bus
>> configured for 3.4MHz and was asked to use 100KHz, it just refuses to
>> load up!
>
> CPU looks to be a bit different in that aspect as compared to I2C. We
> aren't really sure if I2C will work at the existing freq but we are 100%
> sure that current freq of CPU is valid enough, otherwise we wouldn't
> have reached to this point.. :)
>
Not completely true - reaching probe after boot in a few seconds may
not mean that system will remain stable at that frequency for longer
duration. From a silicon vendor perspective, I do know that we
gaurentee the discrete frequencies in the data manual (and that gets
populated in devicetree and hence in freq_table), but we will not
guarentee any other frequency to be functional for any length of time.
in short, if a actual product is manufactured and operational at a
frequency we do not "officially support", there is a risk associated
with that. just a boot on a few development systems do not ever
guarentee productization capability.
>> The above two are fair comments -> but that implies that policy->cur
>> population should no longer be the responsibility of cpufreq drivers
>> and be the responsibility of cpufreq core. are we stating we want to
>> move that to cpufreq core?
>
> I am sure you want to have a look at this:
my bad. I missed this one.
So, to summarize: what is our overall strategy here? to move to a
frequency matched in freq_table OR just giveup? I can try and respin
accordingly.
>
> commit da60ce9f2faca87013fd3cab1c3bed5183608c3d
> Author: Viresh Kumar <viresh.kumar@xxxxxxxxxx>
> Date: Thu Oct 3 20:28:30 2013 +0530
>
> cpufreq: call cpufreq_driver->get() after calling ->init()
>
> Almost all drivers set policy->cur with current CPU frequency in
> their ->init()
> part. This can be done for all of them at core level and so they
> wouldn't need
> to do it.
>
> This patch adds supporting code in cpufreq core for calling get()
> after we have
> called init() for a policy.
>
> Signed-off-by: Viresh Kumar <viresh.kumar@xxxxxxxxxx>
> Signed-off-by: Rafael J. Wysocki <rafael.j.wysocki@xxxxxxxxx>
> ---
> drivers/cpufreq/cpufreq.c | 11 +++++++++++
> 1 file changed, 11 insertions(+)
>
--
Regards,
Nishanth Menon
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