On Wed, Jul 15, 2020 at 07:45:10PM +0200, Michael Walle wrote:
Am 2020-07-15 18:36, schrieb Uwe Kleine-KÃnig:
> On Tue, Jul 14, 2020 at 11:09:28PM +0200, Michael Walle wrote:
> > > My wishlist (just as it comes to my mind, so no guarantee of
> > > completeness):
> > >
> > > - can do 0% duty cycle for all supported period lengths
> > > - can do 100% duty cycle for all supported period lengths
> > > - supports both polarities
> > > - supports immediate change of configuration and after completion of
> > > the currently running period
> > > - atomic update (i.e. if you go from configuration A to configuration B
> > > the hardware guarantees to only emit periods of type A and then type
> > > B. (Depending on the item above, the last A period might be cut off.)
> >
> > We actually discussed this, because the implementation would be
> > easier. But
> > if the change takes place immediately you might end up with a longer
> > duty
> > cycle. Assume the PWM runs at 80% duty cycle and starts with the
> > on-period.
> > If you now change that to 50% you might end up with one successive
> > duty
> > cycle of "130%". Eg. the 80% of the old and right after that you
> > switch to
> > the new 50% and then you'd have a high output which corresponds to a
> > 130%
> > cycle. I don't know if that is acceptable for all applications.
>
> I thought this is a "change takes place immediately" implementation?! So
> these problems are actually real here. (And this not happening is
> exactly
> my wish here. Is there a mis-understanding?)
I wasn't talking about the sl28cpld btw. What is the difference between
your proposed "change take place immediately" and "after the cycle".
I understand how the after the cycle should work. But how would the
immediate change work in your ideal PWM?
If the PWM is running at 1/3 duty cycle and reconfigured for 2/3, then
the two scenarios are (the * marks the moment where pwm_apply_state() is
called, ^ marks the start of a period):
immediately:
__ __ _____ _____
/ \_____/ \__/ \__/
^ ^ ^ ^
*
and with my ideal PWM I can choose which of the two behaviours I want.
> > > > > What about disable()?
> > > >
> > > > Mhh well, it would do one 100% cycle.. mhh ;) Lets see if there we can
> > > > fix that (in hardware), not much we can do in the driver here. We are
> > > > _very_ constraint in size, therefore all that little edge cases fall
> > > > off
> > > > the table.
> > >
> > > You're saying that on disable the hardware emits a constant high level
> > > for one cycle? I hope not ...
> >
> > Mh, I was mistaken, disabling the PWM will turn it off immediately,
> > but
>
> And does turn off mean, the output gets inactive?
> If so you might also disable the hardware if a 0% duty cycle is
> configured assuming this saves some energy without modifying the
> resulting wave form.
Disabling it has some side effects like switching to another function
for this multi function pin. So I'd rather keep it on ;)
So IMHO you should also keep it on when pwm_apply_state is called with
state.enabled = false to ensure a low output.