Re: [PATCH v2 6/8] power: cros_usbpd-charger: Add EC-based USB PD charger driver
From: Tomeu Vizoso
Date: Tue Feb 16 2016 - 09:36:04 EST
On 13 February 2016 at 01:46, Stephen Boyd <sboyd@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
> On 02/12/2016 04:57 AM, Tomeu Vizoso wrote:
>> +
>> +#define EC_MAX_IN_SIZE EC_PROTO2_MAX_REQUEST_SIZE
>> +#define EC_MAX_OUT_SIZE EC_PROTO2_MAX_RESPONSE_SIZE
>> +uint8_t ec_inbuf[EC_MAX_IN_SIZE];
>> +uint8_t ec_outbuf[EC_MAX_OUT_SIZE];
>
> static? Why can't these be part of charger_data?
Actually, I don't think we need any of that pre-allocation.
>> +static int set_ec_usb_pd_override_ports(struct charger_data *charger,
>> + int port_num)
>> +{
>> + struct device *dev = charger->dev;
>> + struct ec_params_charge_port_override req;
>> + int ret;
>> +
>> + req.override_port = port_num;
>> +
>> + ret = ec_command(charger->ec_dev, 0, EC_CMD_PD_CHARGE_PORT_OVERRIDE,
>> + (uint8_t *)&req, sizeof(req),
>> + NULL, 0);
>> + if (ret < 0) {
>> + dev_info(dev, "Port Override command returned 0x%x\n", ret);
>
> dev_err?
Sounds good.
>> + pr_info("PDLOG %d/%02d/%02d %02d:%02d:%02d.%03d P%d %s\n",
>> + rt.tm_year + 1900, rt.tm_mon + 1, rt.tm_mday,
>> + rt.tm_hour, rt.tm_min, rt.tm_sec,
>> + (int)(ktime_to_ms(tstamp) % MSEC_PER_SEC),
>> + PD_LOG_PORT(r->size_port), buf);
>
> Is the kernel log a good place to be putting this information? Maybe
> this should go into debugfs?
It should be really sparse and it has already proved useful to users
willing to know if their Type-C cables are broken.We could also make
it dev_dbg.
http://www.ibtimes.co.uk/googler-shows-how-test-compatibility-usb-c-cable-chromebook-pixel-2015-1527334
>> + return NOTIFY_OK;
>> + } else {
>> + return NOTIFY_DONE;
>> + }
>
> Simplify to return NOTIFY_DONE without the else.
Ok.
>> +}
>> +
>> +static char *charger_supplied_to[] = {"cros-usb_pd-charger"};
>
> const?
In principle yes, but power_supply_config.supplied_to isn't const.
>> + !charger->num_charger_ports) {
>> + /*
>> + * This can happen on a system that doesn't support USB PD.
>> + * Log a message, but no need to warn.
>> + */
>> + dev_info(dev, "No charging ports found\n");
>
> dev_err?
I think so, but will also need to make sure that we only register a
device if we have one or more charging port.
>> + ret = -ENODEV;
>> + goto fail_nowarn;
>> + }
>> +
>> + for (i = 0; i < charger->num_charger_ports; i++) {
>> + port = devm_kzalloc(dev, sizeof(struct port_data), GFP_KERNEL);
>> + if (!port) {
>> + dev_err(dev, "Failed to alloc port structure\n");
>
> We don't need error messages on allocation failures (checkpatch usually
> catches this).
It did catch another one in this file, not sure why it failed here.
>> +
>> +fail_nowarn:
>> + if (charger) {
>
> This is always true?
Ah, yes.
>> + for (i = 0; i < charger->num_registered_psy; i++) {
>> + port = charger->ports[i];
>> + power_supply_unregister(port->psy);
>> + devm_kfree(dev, port);
>> + }
>> + platform_set_drvdata(pd, NULL);
>> + devm_kfree(dev, charger);
>
> Seems like we could let devres take care of this.
Indeed.
>> + }
>> +
>> + dev_info(dev, "Failing probe (err:0x%x)\n", ret);
>
> Is this necessary? Doesn't driver core already spew something out for
> this case if some debugging flag is enabled?
True, a warning is printed.
>> + return ret;
>> +}
>> +
>> +static int cros_usb_pd_charger_remove(struct platform_device *pd)
>> +{
>> + struct charger_data *charger = platform_get_drvdata(pd);
>> + struct device *dev = charger->dev;
>> + struct port_data *port;
>> + int i;
>> +
>> + if (charger) {
>
> We just derefed charger a few lines up.
Ok.
>> + for (i = 0; i < charger->num_registered_psy; i++) {
>> + port = charger->ports[i];
>> + power_supply_unregister(port->psy);
>> + devm_kfree(dev, port);
>
> Can't we let driver removal take care of this?
Ok.
>> + }
>> + flush_delayed_work(&charger->log_work);
>> + platform_set_drvdata(pd, NULL);
>
> This is not needed.
Ok.
>> + devm_kfree(dev, charger);
>
> Again, driver remove already does this?
Yup.
>> + }
>> + return 0;
>> +}
>> +
>> +#ifdef CONFIG_PM_SLEEP
>> +static int cros_usb_pd_charger_resume(struct device *dev)
>> +{
>> + struct charger_data *charger = dev_get_drvdata(dev);
>> + int i;
>> +
>> + if (!charger)
>> + return 0;
>
> Seems sort of impossible...
True.
>> +
>> + charger->suspended = false;
>> +
>> + dev_dbg(dev, "cros_usb_pd_charger_resume: updating power supplies\n");
>> + for (i = 0; i < charger->num_registered_psy; i++) {
>> + power_supply_changed(charger->ports[i]->psy);
>> + charger->ports[i]->last_update =
>> + jiffies - CROS_USB_PD_CACHE_UPDATE_DELAY;
>> + }
>> + queue_delayed_work(charger->log_workqueue, &charger->log_work,
>> + CROS_USB_PD_LOG_UPDATE_DELAY);
>> +
>> + return 0;
>> +}
>> +
>> +static int cros_usb_pd_charger_suspend(struct device *dev)
>> +{
>> + struct charger_data *charger = dev_get_drvdata(dev);
>> +
>> + charger->suspended = true;
>> +
>> + if (charger)
>
> We just derefed charger so it better be non-NULL
Yup.
>> + ret = ec_command(ec, 0, EC_CMD_EXT_POWER_CURRENT_LIMIT,
>> + (uint8_t *)&req, sizeof(req), NULL, 0);
>> + if (ret < 0) {
>> + dev_warn(ec->dev,
>> + "External power limit command returned 0x%x\n",
>> + ret);
>
> dev_err?
Sounds good to me.
>> + if (ext_current_lim == EC_POWER_LIMIT_NONE)
>> + dev_info(ec->dev, "External current limit removed\n");
>> + else
>> + dev_info(ec->dev, "External current limit set to %dmA\n",
>> + ext_current_lim);
>
> Why are we dev_info printing on sysfs writes?
Cannot think of a good reason, so I'm changing those to dev_dbg.
>> + ext_voltage_lim = tmp_val;
>> + if (ext_voltage_lim == EC_POWER_LIMIT_NONE)
>> + dev_info(ec->dev, "External voltage limit removed\n");
>> + else
>> + dev_info(ec->dev, "External voltage limit set to %dmV\n",
>> + ext_voltage_lim);
>
> Again...
Ok.
>> +
>> + return count;
>> +}
>> +
>> +static DEVICE_ATTR(ext_current_lim, S_IWUSR | S_IWGRP | S_IRUGO,
>> + get_ec_ext_current_lim,
>> + set_ec_ext_current_lim);
>> +static DEVICE_ATTR(ext_voltage_lim, S_IWUSR | S_IWGRP | S_IRUGO,
>> + get_ec_ext_voltage_lim,
>> + set_ec_ext_voltage_lim);
>
> Any documentation for these in Documentation/ABI?
Will add.
>> +static struct attribute *__ext_power_cmds_attrs[] = {
>> + &dev_attr_ext_current_lim.attr,
>> + &dev_attr_ext_voltage_lim.attr,
>> + NULL,
>> +};
>> +
>> +struct attribute_group cros_usb_pd_charger_attr_group = {
>
> static?
Not really, as it's to be used externally.
>> + .name = "usb-pd-charger",
>> + .attrs = __ext_power_cmds_attrs,
>> +};
>> +
>> +static SIMPLE_DEV_PM_OPS(cros_usb_pd_charger_pm_ops,
>> + cros_usb_pd_charger_suspend, cros_usb_pd_charger_resume);
>
> const?
The macro already has the const keyword.
>> +
>> +static struct platform_driver cros_usb_pd_charger_driver = {
>> + .driver = {
>> + .name = "cros-usb-pd-charger",
>> + .owner = THIS_MODULE,
>
> This isn't needed anymore.
Ok.
Thank you very much for the great review!
Tomeu