Re: [PATCH 1/3] regulator: core: fix boot-on regulators use_count usage
From: Doug Anderson
Date: Tue Oct 01 2019 - 15:57:46 EST
Hi,
On Fri, Sep 27, 2019 at 1:47 AM Marco Felsch <m.felsch@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
> > > > > It should be possible to do a regulator_disable() though I'm not
> > > > > sure anyone actually uses that. The pattern for a regular
> > > > > consumer should be the normal enable/disable pair to handle
> > > > > shared usage, only an exclusive consumer should be able to use
> > > > > just a straight disable.
>
> In my case it is a regulator-fixed which uses the enable/disable pair.
> But as my descriptions says this will not work currently because boot-on
> marked regulators can't be disabled right now (using the same logic as
> always-on regulators).
>
> > > > Ah, I see, I wasn't aware of the "exclusive" special case! Marco: is
> > > > this working for you? I wonder if we need to match
> > > > "regulator->enable_count" to "rdev->use_count" at the end of
> > > > _regulator_get() in the exclusive case...
>
> So my fix isn't correct to fix this in general?
I don't think your fix is correct. It sounds as if the intention of
"regulator-boot-on" is to have the OS turn the regulator on at bootup
and it keep an implicit reference until someone explicitly tells the
OS to drop the reference.
> > > Yes, I think that case has been missed when adding the enable
> > > counts - I've never actually had a system myself that made any
> > > use of this stuff. It probably needs an audit of the users to
> > > make sure nobody's relying on the current behaviour though I
> > > can't think how they would.
> >
> > Marco: I'm going to assume you'll tackle this since I don't actually
> > have any use cases that need this.
>
> My use case is a simple regulator-fixed which is turned on by the
> bootloader or to be more precise by the pmic-rom. To map that correctly
> I marked this regulator as boot-on. Unfortunately as I pointed out above
> this is handeld the same way as always-on.
It's a fixed regulator controlled by a GPIO? Presumably the GPIO can
be read. That would mean it ideally shouldn't be using
"regulator-boot-on" since this is _not_ a regulator whose software
state can't be read. Just remove the property.
-Doug