Re: [PATCH] regmap: support regmap_field_write() on non-readable fields

From: Krzysztof Kozlowski
Date: Tue Jul 19 2022 - 10:37:26 EST


On 19/07/2022 15:41, Mark Brown wrote:
> On Tue, Jul 19, 2022 at 03:13:11PM +0200, Krzysztof Kozlowski wrote:
>> On 19/07/2022 14:54, Charles Keepax wrote:
>
>>> I think this will break other valid use-cases, regmap_readable (I
>>> believe) returns if the register is physically readable, however
>>> it should still be possible to use update bits if the register is
>>> in the cache even if it can't physically be read. So really you
>>> need to fall into this path if it is readable or in the cache.
>
>> But what type of real use case this would be trying to solve? Either
>> register is readable or not. The presence of cache is just optimization
>> and does not change the fact that we cannot read from register thus no
>> need to go via updates.
>
> The original reason for creating the cache code was to simulate
> readability on devices that have no read support at all (think 7x9
> format I2C devices) so we can have things like helpers to map bitfields
> directly to subsystems (like ASoC uses extensively). The fact that it
> also improves performance when the hardware does support reads is nice
> too of course.
>
>>> Which does I guess also raise the question if your problem would
>>> be better solved with caching the register?
>
>> And how the value would appear in the cache? Since register cannot be
>> read, I expect the cache to be filled on first update. First update
>> would be read+write, so we are stuck again.
>
> This is one reason we allow cache defaults to be specified (it was the
> original reason, we later started using them to optimise out I/O during
> resyncs).

Thanks Mark and Charles. Let me try the cache.

Best regards,
Krzysztof