On Tue, 2015-10-13 at 11:36 +0100, Sudeep Holla wrote:
[...]
On 13/10/15 08:19, Jon Medhurst (Tixy) wrote:
But then we wouldn't get the WARN_ON and pr_err triggered when we detect
the clock rate isn't set, which surely is half the reason for the check
in the first place?
Not sure if I understand what you mean or may be I was not clear, so
thought I will put the delta here. Let me know if and how its still a
problem.
diff --git i/drivers/cpufreq/arm_big_little.c
w/drivers/cpufreq/arm_big_little.c
index f1e42f8ce0fc..05e850f80f39 100644
--- i/drivers/cpufreq/arm_big_little.c
+++ w/drivers/cpufreq/arm_big_little.c
@@ -164,6 +164,16 @@ bL_cpufreq_set_rate(u32 cpu, u32 old_cluster, u32
new_cluster, u32 rate)
mutex_unlock(&cluster_lock[new_cluster]);
+ /*
+ * FIXME: clk_set_rate has to handle the case where clk_change_rate
+ * can fail due to hardware or firmware issues. Until the clk core
+ * layer is fixed, we can check here. In most of the cases we will
+ * be reading only the cached value anyway. This needs to be
removed
+ * once clk core is fixed.
+ */
+ if (bL_cpufreq_get_rate(cpu) != new_rate)
+ return -EIO;
+
/* Recalc freq for old cluster when switching clusters */
if (old_cluster != new_cluster) {
pr_debug("%s: cpu: %d, old cluster: %d, new cluster: %d\n",
That's what I though you meant, and I can't see why you would want to do
that and bypass the error reporting for clk_get_rate failing. After all,
the code we're moving around is explicitly there to workaround the fact
that clk_set_rate doesn't actually pass through all errors, so it's
doing additional error checking. (At least, that's what the comment
says). So this looks more logical to me.