Re: [PATCH v2 5/5] power: supply: axp20x_usb_power: set input current limit in probe

From: Aren
Date: Tue Jan 30 2024 - 23:20:52 EST


On Tue, Jan 30, 2024 at 10:13:06PM +0100, Ondřej Jirman wrote:
> On Tue, Jan 30, 2024 at 03:28:01PM -0500, Aren Moynihan wrote:
> > axp803 sets the current limit to 3A by default if it doesn't detect a
> > battery. The datasheet says that register 0x2D bit 6 is used to indicate
> > first power on status. According to it, if that bit is 0 and the battery
> > is not detected, it will set the input current limit to 3A, however
> > setting that bit to 1 doesn't to prevent the pmic from setting the
> > current limit to 3A.
> >
> > Waiting for USB BC detection doesn't work either, because (as far as I
> > can tell) USB BC detection isn't performed when there isn't a battery
> > detected.
> >
> > Fixes: c279adafe6ab ("power: supply: axp20x_usb_power: add support for AXP813")
>
> Breaks: ;)
>
> Last time you wrote:
>
> > Unfortunately BC 1.2 detection doesn't seem to be performed without a
> > battery, at least I wasn't able to trigger it.
> >
> > This will be worth revising once we have a driver that can provide a
> > signal that USB-PD is in progress and/or finished, but until then I'd
> > prefer not take on that complexity.
>
> This patch adds complexity and will lead to hard to debug issues for some
> people. It certainly did cause issues for me, when I had similar patch in
> my tree a while ago, forcing me to drop it.
>
> There are other situations you're not considering. Like battery being
> very discharged and unable to provide power, while still being detected
> and BC1.2 running correctly and successfully when the device is powered
> up by being plugged into DCP port (only option of powerup in such a
> scenario).

Oh you're right, I overlooked the case where the battery is very low, in
which case bc detection should still be performed (I think, I haven't
tested it). This issue this patch is trying to fix doesn't apply in that
case, so it should be simple enough to check if the pmic has detected a
battery and skip setting the current limit if it has.

> Battery is detected at 2.2V and certainly it will not provide any power
> if OCV of the battery is anywhere below 3V. See "9.4.5 Battery detection"
> in AXP803 datasheet. So you have about 1V range of possible battery voltage
> where BC1.2 will work, but you'll force lower the correctly detected current
> limit and break boot, because 2.5W is too low for the boot time power surge.
>
> The phone will just randomly die halfthrough boot for apparently no reason,
> despite being connected to DCP.
>
> And also forget Pinephone, there may also be batteryless SBCs using this PMIC
> with battery as an option (similar to Quartz64-A - Rockchip SBC, but exactly
> this setup with battery capable PMIC in the power path on a normal SBC, with
> battery being optional), where this patch will break boot on them, too. I'm
> quite confident PMIC relaxing the limit without a battery is meant for such use
> cases.

Perhaps it would be better to read the limit from the device tree, that
way it could be set higher for a specific board if it needs to draw that
much current and be able to boot without a battery? It seems sketchy to
default to a current limit significantly higher than what the usb power
supply is required to support.

> If you insist on adding this, at least add dev_warn() about forcing lower
> limit than detected by the PMIC, so that people who'll do cursory debugging
> via serial console will know why's their device failing to boot on a strong
> enough power supply, or why their SBC is suddenly failing when used without
> battery.

Adding a dev_warn is a good idea, I'll do that.

Thanks for the review
- Aren

> As for me, this patch should not be applied at all.
>
> Kind regards,
> o.
>
> > Signed-off-by: Aren Moynihan <aren@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
> > ---
> > I'm not sure if the pmic simply ignores the first power on field, or if
> > it needs to be set in a specific way / at a specific time. I tried
> > setting it in arm-trusted-firmware, and the pmic still set the input
> > current limit to 3A.
> >
> > The datasheet for axp813 says it has the same first power on bit, but I
> > don't have hardware to test if it behaves the same way. This driver uses
> > the same platform data for axp803 and axp813.
> >
> > (no changes since v1)
> >
> > drivers/power/supply/axp20x_usb_power.c | 13 +++++++++++++
> > 1 file changed, 13 insertions(+)
> >
> > diff --git a/drivers/power/supply/axp20x_usb_power.c b/drivers/power/supply/axp20x_usb_power.c
> > index dae7e5cfc54e..751b9f02d36f 100644
> > --- a/drivers/power/supply/axp20x_usb_power.c
> > +++ b/drivers/power/supply/axp20x_usb_power.c
> > @@ -51,6 +51,7 @@ struct axp_data {
> > unsigned int num_irq_names;
> > const int *curr_lim_table;
> > int curr_lim_table_size;
> > + int force_curr_lim;
> > struct reg_field curr_lim_fld;
> > struct reg_field vbus_valid_bit;
> > struct reg_field vbus_mon_bit;
> > @@ -545,6 +546,7 @@ static const struct axp_data axp813_data = {
> > .curr_lim_table = axp813_usb_curr_lim_table,
> > .curr_lim_table_size = ARRAY_SIZE(axp813_usb_curr_lim_table),
> > .curr_lim_fld = REG_FIELD(AXP22X_CHRG_CTRL3, 4, 7),
> > + .force_curr_lim = 500000,
> > .usb_bc_en_bit = REG_FIELD(AXP288_BC_GLOBAL, 0, 0),
> > .usb_bc_det_fld = REG_FIELD(AXP288_BC_DET_STAT, 5, 7),
> > .vbus_disable_bit = REG_FIELD(AXP20X_VBUS_IPSOUT_MGMT, 7, 7),
> > @@ -726,6 +728,17 @@ static int axp20x_usb_power_probe(struct platform_device *pdev)
> > return ret;
> > }
> >
> > + if (power->axp_data->force_curr_lim) {
> > + /*
> > + * Some chips set the input current limit to 3A when there is no
> > + * battery connected. Normally the default is 500mA.
> > + */
> > + ret = axp20x_usb_power_set_input_current_limit(power,
> > + power->axp_data->force_curr_lim);
> > + if (ret)
> > + return ret;
> > + }
> > +
> > if (power->usb_bc_en_bit) {
> > /* Enable USB Battery Charging specification detection */
> > ret = regmap_field_write(power->usb_bc_en_bit, 1);
> > --
> > 2.43.0
> >