Re: [PATCH v2 1/2] dt-bindings: interrupt-controller: mpm: Pass MSG RAM slice through phandle

From: Krzysztof Kozlowski
Date: Thu Apr 13 2023 - 04:50:42 EST


On 12/04/2023 19:06, Konrad Dybcio wrote:
>
>
> On 12.04.2023 18:53, Krzysztof Kozlowski wrote:
>> On 12/04/2023 14:09, Konrad Dybcio wrote:
>>>
>>>
>>> On 12.04.2023 13:55, Krzysztof Kozlowski wrote:
>>>> On 12/04/2023 13:47, Konrad Dybcio wrote:
>>>>>> For unrelated reasons I actually have some patches for this, that switch
>>>>>> the /smd top-level node to a "remoteproc-like" node dedicated to the
>>>>>> RPM, similar to how WCNSS/ADSP/Modem/etc are represented. I need this to
>>>>>> add additional (optional) properties like "resets" and "iommus" for the
>>>>>> RPM, but it would allow adding arbitrary subnodes as well:
>>>>>>
>>>>>> https://github.com/msm8916-mainline/linux/commit/35231ac28703805daa8220f1233847c7df34589e
>>>>>>
>>>>>> I could finish those up and post them if that would help...
>>>>> Krzysztof, what do you think?
>>>>
>>>> I don't know what is there in MSM8916 and how it should be represented.
>>> Similarly to other Qualcomm SoCs, MSM8916 has a RPM (Cortex-M3) core,
>>> which communicates over the SMD protocol (or G-LINK on >=8996).
>>>
>>> The Qualcomm firmware loads the RPM fw blob and sets it up early in
>>> the boot process, but msm8916-mainline folks managed to get TF-A
>>> going and due to it being less.. invasive.. than the Qualcomm TZ,
>>> RPM needs a bit more handling to be accessible.
>>>
>>> The M3 core is wired up through the CNoC bus and we communicate
>>> with it through the MSG RAM and the "APCS mailbox".
>>
>> Thanks, that's actually good description. Yet I still do not know what
>> is exactly the problem and the question. Linking some out of tree
>> commits does not give me the answer, at least I cannot get that answer
>> form the link.
>>
>> For example what I don't understand is: why additional resources (like
>> resets) can be provided only in new binding, but not in the old.
> The old binding dictates that the rpm node (which in turn
> holds all "devices" that only interface with RPM, like RPMCC) is
> a child of smd{}, which does not make sense logically, as SMD is
> a protocol (e.g. we don't place devices connected over i2c under
> /i2c{}).

We do. All devices connected over I2C are under i2c node which is the
controller. The example is different than what you have here...

> The rpm node lacks a compatible, as it's representing
> an "smd channel", so there's no driver so there's no way to assert
> resets etc.

You have rpm-requests which has compatible. These are not its resources?

>
> On newer SoCs that still implement SMD RPM (like 8996), we do
> actually have a driver and a parent node which it binds to
> (rpm-glink).

You want to add RPM resets to rpm-glink node? This also does not look right.

>
> AFAIU:
> In both cases, the "final" drivers (rpmcc, rpmpd..) are bound
> after hitting a SMD/GLINK callback that tells Linux we're ready
> to rock. That's an issue for Stephan, as these callbacks won't
> ever happen if the RPM core is not initialized (and TF-A doesn't
> do that).

To me half or almost all of Qualcomm remote-proc-related bindings, like
SMD, GLINK and associated processors, are difficult to read, half-baked
and developed to match the current Linux/SW need. When the Linux drivers
changed, new bindings were added... If you want to fix it, sure go
ahead, but design everything to match something rational, not again to
match one specific SW/FW implementation.

Best regards,
Krzysztof