Re: [PATCH V3 4/6] tty: serial: meson: The UART baud rate calculation is described using the common clock code. Also added S4 chip uart Compatible.

From: Yu Tu
Date: Sat Jan 01 2022 - 08:30:38 EST


Hi Martin,
Thank you very much for your reply.

On 2021/12/31 23:32, Martin Blumenstingl wrote:
[ EXTERNAL EMAIL ]

On Fri, Dec 31, 2021 at 12:24 PM Yu Tu <yu.tu@xxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
[...]
static int meson_uart_request_port(struct uart_port *port)
{
+ struct meson_uart_data *private_data = port->private_data;
+ int ret;
+
+ ret = clk_prepare_enable(private_data->pclk);
+ if (ret)
+ return ret;
+
+ ret = clk_prepare_enable(private_data->baud_clk);
+ if (ret) {
+ clk_disable_unprepare(private_data->pclk);
+ return ret;
+ }
This code is from my original suggestion - and I had a doubt there
which I forgot to add as a comment originally:
Can you confirm that accessing the UART controller registers works
even when "pclk" is turned off?
I am asking this because the common clock framework can access the
clocks at any time.
And I have seen SoCs which would hang when trying to access a module's
registers while the module's pclk is turned off.
On all meson platforms, the default pclk for all UART is turned on
during the u-boot phase. When registering uart pclk in the kernel phase,
the CLK_IGNORE_UNUSED flag is added. So the real shutdown is when the
standby goes down, the parent clk shuts down.
Interesting, thanks for sharing that u-boot turns these clocks on.
Let's say someone wanted to make u-boot save power and turn off all
UART clocks except the one for uart_AO (where we typically connect the
serial console).
In that case the pclk of uart_C (just to choose an example here) is
turned off. Would there be a problem then accessing the registers of
uart_C before clk_prepare_enable is called?
The way you describe it, it does hang. This would not be recommended on actual projects.

At present, AmLogic chips are older than S4 Soc, and we have no way to deal with this problem. We have to tell customers not to use it in this way。Customers rarely use it in real projects.On the S4 SOC we will use a clock like the UART pclk to control the shutdown using two registers, one safe (need to operate in EL3) and one normal (EL1). It will only be closed if both registers are closed. This mainly prevents misoperation.

With your experience, I'd like to know how you deal with this kind of problem.

[...]
port->fifosize = 64;
commit 27d44e05d7b85d ("tty: serial: meson: retrieve port FIFO size
from DT") [0] from May 2021 has changed this line to:
port->fifosize = fifosize;
So your patch currently does not apply to linux-next (or even Linus'
mainline tree).

So do I need to wait for [0] patch merged before I can continue to make
changes ?
These changes are already merged.

What can I do before?
You should base your changes on top of the tty.git/tty-next branch [1]
where Greg (the maintainer of this tree) will pick up the patches once
they are good (got enough Acked-by/Reviewed-by, etc.).
I suspect that you based your changes on an older or stable kernel
version (let's say 5.10). New functionality should always get into the
-next tree where various auto-build robots will compile-test the
changes and we even have Kernel CI where changes are tested on real
hardware (BayLibre even maintains Amlogic boards in their Kernel CI
labs). Let's say Amlogic updates to Linux 5.17 next year then the
patches are already included in that kernel version - instead of being
only available in Linux 5.10.

I'm sorry, I did branch confirm there was a mistake, I have corrected.

Best regards,
Martin


[1] https://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/gregkh/tty.git/log/?h=tty-next