Re: [RFC PATCH 3/3] clk: tegra: Implement Tegra124 shared/cbus clks
From: Mike Turquette
Date: Wed May 14 2014 - 15:35:30 EST
Quoting Thierry Reding (2014-05-14 07:27:40)
> On Tue, May 13, 2014 at 12:09:49PM -0600, Stephen Warren wrote:
> > On 05/13/2014 08:06 AM, Peter De Schrijver wrote:
> > > Add shared and cbus clocks to the Tegra124 clock implementation.
> >
> > > diff --git a/include/dt-bindings/clock/tegra124-car.h b/include/dt-bindings/clock/tegra124-car.h
> >
> > > +#define TEGRA124_CLK_C2BUS 401
> > > +#define TEGRA124_CLK_C3BUS 402
> > > +#define TEGRA124_CLK_GR3D_CBUS 403
> > > +#define TEGRA124_CLK_GR2D_CBUS 404
> > ...
> >
> > I worry about this a bit. IIUC, these clocks don't actually exist in HW,
> > but are more a way of SW applying policy to the clock that do exist in
> > HW. As such, I'm not convinced it's a good idea to expose these clock
> > IDS to DT, since DT is supposed to represent the HW, and not be
> > influenced by internal SW implementation details.
> >
> > Do any DTs actually need to used these new clock IDs? I don't think we
> > could actually use these value in e.g. tegra124.dtsi's clocks
> > properties, since these clocks don't exist in HW. Was it your intent to
> > do that? If not, can't we just define these SW-internal clock IDs in the
> > header inside the Tegra clock driver, so the values are invisible to DT?
>
> I'm beginning to wonder if abusing clocks in this way is really the best
> solution. From what I understand there are two problems here that are
> mostly orthogonal though they're implemented using similar techniques.
Ack. "Virtual clocks" have been implemented by vendors before as a way
to manage complicated clock rate changes. I do not think we should
support such a method upstream.
I'm working with another engineer in Linaro on a "coordinated clock rate
change" series that might help solve some of the problems that this
patch series is trying to achieve.
>
> The reason for introducing cbus clocks are still unclear to me. From the
> cover letter of this patch series it seems like these should be
> completely hidden from drivers and as such they don't belong in device
> tree. Also if they are an implementation detail, why are they even
> implemented as clocks? Perhaps an example use-case would help illustrate
> the need for this.
I also have this question. Does "cbus" come from your TRM or data sheet?
Or is it purely a software solution to coordinating rate changes within
known limits and for validated combinations?
>
> As for shared clocks I'm only aware of one use-case, namely EMC scaling.
> Using clocks for that doesn't seem like the best option to me. While it
> can probably fix the immediate issue of choosing an appropriate
> frequency for the EMC clock it isn't a complete solution for the problem
> that we're trying to solve. From what I understand EMC scaling is one
> part of ensuring quality of service. The current implementations of that
> seems to abuse clocks (essentially one X.emc clock per X clock) to
> signal the amount of memory bandwidth required by any given device. But
> there are other parts to the puzzle. Latency allowance is one. The value
> programmed to the latency allowance registers for example depends on the
> EMC frequency.
>
> Has anyone ever looked into using a different framework to model all of
> these requirements? PM QoS looks like it might fit, but if none of the
> existing frameworks have what we need, perhaps something new can be
> created.
It has been discussed. Using a QoS throughput constraint could help
scale frequency. But this deserves a wider discussion and starts to
stray into both PM QoS territory and also into "should we have a DVFS
framework" territory.
Regards,
Mike
>
> Thierry
--
To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-kernel" in
the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html
Please read the FAQ at http://www.tux.org/lkml/