Yes. It is handled by a remote processor, which is aware that the application
On 23/01/18 18:44, Lina Iyer wrote:
On Tue, Jan 23 2018 at 18:15 +0000, Sudeep Holla wrote:
Hi Lina,Yes. When all the CPUs are in idle, there is an opportunity to power off
On Tue, Jan 23, 2018 at 5:56 PM, Lina Iyer <ilina@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
On newer Qualcomm Techonologies Inc's SoCs like the SDM845, the GIC
is in a
power domain that can be powered off when not needed. Interrupts that
need to
be sensed even when the GIC is powered off, are routed through an
interrupt
controller in an always-on domain called the Power Domain Controller
a.k.a PDC.
This series adds support for the PDC's interrupt controller.
Sorry for the basic questions:
1. Will the GIC be powered off in any other state other than System
suspend ?
the CPU's power domain and the GIC. QCOM SoCs have been doing that for
many generations now.
OK interesting, in that case so either GIC state is saved/restored with
some out of tree patches or the firmware takes care of it and it's
transparent to Linux ?
Also when will this PDC wakeup interrupts get configured ?The platform drivers configure the IRQ as a wake source and if the IRQ
Yes, through the hierarchy.2. Why this needs to be done in Linux, why can't it be transparent andNo. You are right, Linux is not powering off the GIC directly. A
hidden
ÂÂ in the firmware doing the actual GIC power down ? I assume Linux is
not
ÂÂ powering down the GIC.
dedicated processor for power management in the SoC does that. Platform
drivers in Linux, know and configure the wakeup interrupts (depending on
the usecase). This is runtime specific and this is the way to tell the
SoC to wake up the processor even if the GIC and the CPU domain were
powered off.
OK, understood. By transparent, I mean firmware can copy the interrupts
enabled in the GIC to the PDC. It need not be kernel driven.
Yes. There is a partition and protected. So only permitted ELs can writeLinux should not and would not configure secure interrupts. We would not
3. I see some bits that enable secure interrupts in one of the patch.
Is that even
ÂÂ safe to allow Linux to enable some secure interrupts in PDC ?
have permissions for secure interrupts. The interrupt names might be a
misnomer, but the interrupts listed in patch #4 are all non-secure
interrupts.
OK. So I can assume PDC is partitioned in secure and non-secure. If not
it's safe not have any access for PDC in the kernel. Couple of designs
of similar PDC I have seen is system wide and does handle even secure
part of the system. That was the main reason for checking.