diff options
author | Douglas Anderson <dianders@chromium.org> | 2020-04-13 20:04:11 +0300 |
---|---|---|
committer | Bjorn Andersson <bjorn.andersson@linaro.org> | 2020-04-14 08:09:35 +0300 |
commit | e40b0c1628f27986dd90f94c43464df5aa8968cf (patch) | |
tree | 0e4a434f06eecf574e22bc0fbd78e592d30c9124 /drivers/soc/qcom/rpmh-rsc.c | |
parent | 1bc92a933f19e2415353a4892f7df4617f691b6c (diff) | |
download | linux-e40b0c1628f27986dd90f94c43464df5aa8968cf.tar.xz |
soc: qcom: rpmh-rsc: A lot of comments
I've been pouring through the rpmh-rsc code and trying to understand
it. Document everything to the best of my ability. All documentation
here is strictly from code analysis--no actual knowledge of the
hardware was used. If something is wrong in here I either
misunderstood the code, had a typo, or the code has a bug in it
leading to my incorrect understanding.
In a few places here I have documented things that don't make tons of
sense. A future patch will try to address this. While this means I'm
adding comments / todos and then later fixing them in the series, it
seemed more urgent to get things documented first so that people could
understand the later patches.
Any comments I adjusted I also tried to make match kernel-doc better.
Specifically:
- kernel-doc says do not leave a blank line between the function
description and the arguments
- kernel-doc examples always have things starting w/ a capital and
ending with a period.
This should be a no-op. It's just comment changes.
Signed-off-by: Douglas Anderson <dianders@chromium.org>
Reviewed-by: Maulik Shah <mkshah@codeaurora.org>
Reviewed-by: Stephen Boyd <swboyd@chromium.org>
Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/20200413100321.v4.6.I52653eb85d7dc8981ee0dafcd0b6cc0f273e9425@changeid
Signed-off-by: Bjorn Andersson <bjorn.andersson@linaro.org>
Diffstat (limited to 'drivers/soc/qcom/rpmh-rsc.c')
-rw-r--r-- | drivers/soc/qcom/rpmh-rsc.c | 222 |
1 files changed, 207 insertions, 15 deletions
diff --git a/drivers/soc/qcom/rpmh-rsc.c b/drivers/soc/qcom/rpmh-rsc.c index c9e5cddbc099..78fe9344ecd3 100644 --- a/drivers/soc/qcom/rpmh-rsc.c +++ b/drivers/soc/qcom/rpmh-rsc.c @@ -171,12 +171,39 @@ static void write_tcs_reg_sync(struct rsc_drv *drv, int reg, int tcs_id, } } +/** + * tcs_is_free() - Return if a TCS is totally free. + * @drv: The RSC controller. + * @tcs_id: The global ID of this TCS. + * + * Returns true if nobody has claimed this TCS (by setting tcs_in_use). + * If the TCS looks free, checks that the hardware agrees. + * + * Context: Must be called with the drv->lock held or the tcs_lock for the TCS + * being tested. If only the tcs_lock is held then it is possible that + * this function will return that a tcs is still busy when it has been + * recently been freed but it will never return free when a TCS is + * actually in use. + * + * Return: true if the given TCS is free. + */ static bool tcs_is_free(struct rsc_drv *drv, int tcs_id) { return !test_bit(tcs_id, drv->tcs_in_use) && read_tcs_reg(drv, RSC_DRV_STATUS, tcs_id); } +/** + * tcs_invalidate() - Invalidate all TCSes of the given type (sleep or wake). + * @drv: The RSC controller. + * @type: SLEEP_TCS or WAKE_TCS + * + * This will clear the "slots" variable of the given tcs_group and also + * tell the hardware to forget about all entries. + * + * Return: 0 if no problem, or -EAGAIN if the caller should try again in a + * bit. Caller should make sure to enable interrupts between tries. + */ static int tcs_invalidate(struct rsc_drv *drv, int type) { int m; @@ -203,9 +230,11 @@ static int tcs_invalidate(struct rsc_drv *drv, int type) } /** - * rpmh_rsc_invalidate - Invalidate sleep and wake TCSes + * rpmh_rsc_invalidate() - Invalidate sleep and wake TCSes. + * @drv: The RSC controller. * - * @drv: the RSC controller + * Return: 0 if no problem, or -EAGAIN if the caller should try again in a + * bit. Caller should make sure to enable interrupts between tries. */ int rpmh_rsc_invalidate(struct rsc_drv *drv) { @@ -218,6 +247,18 @@ int rpmh_rsc_invalidate(struct rsc_drv *drv) return ret; } +/** + * get_tcs_for_msg() - Get the tcs_group used to send the given message. + * @drv: The RSC controller. + * @msg: The message we want to send. + * + * This is normally pretty straightforward except if we are trying to send + * an ACTIVE_ONLY message but don't have any active_only TCSes. + * + * Called without drv->lock held and with no tcs_lock locks held. + * + * Return: A pointer to a tcs_group or an ERR_PTR. + */ static struct tcs_group *get_tcs_for_msg(struct rsc_drv *drv, const struct tcs_request *msg) { @@ -241,7 +282,9 @@ static struct tcs_group *get_tcs_for_msg(struct rsc_drv *drv, /* * If we are making an active request on a RSC that does not have a * dedicated TCS for active state use, then re-purpose a wake TCS to - * send active votes. + * send active votes. This is safe because we ensure any active-only + * transfers have finished before we use it (maybe by running from + * the last CPU in PM code). */ tcs = &drv->tcs[type]; if (msg->state == RPMH_ACTIVE_ONLY_STATE && !tcs->num_tcs) @@ -250,6 +293,22 @@ static struct tcs_group *get_tcs_for_msg(struct rsc_drv *drv, return tcs; } +/** + * get_req_from_tcs() - Get a stashed request that was xfering on the given TCS. + * @drv: The RSC controller. + * @tcs_id: The global ID of this TCS. + * + * For ACTIVE_ONLY transfers we want to call back into the client when the + * transfer finishes. To do this we need the "request" that the client + * originally provided us. This function grabs the request that we stashed + * when we started the transfer. + * + * This only makes sense for ACTIVE_ONLY transfers since those are the only + * ones we track sending (the only ones we enable interrupts for and the only + * ones we call back to the client for). + * + * Return: The stashed request. + */ static const struct tcs_request *get_req_from_tcs(struct rsc_drv *drv, int tcs_id) { @@ -265,6 +324,23 @@ static const struct tcs_request *get_req_from_tcs(struct rsc_drv *drv, return NULL; } +/** + * __tcs_set_trigger() - Start xfer on a TCS or unset trigger on a borrowed TCS + * @drv: The controller. + * @tcs_id: The global ID of this TCS. + * @trigger: If true then untrigger/retrigger. If false then just untrigger. + * + * In the normal case we only ever call with "trigger=true" to start a + * transfer. That will un-trigger/disable the TCS from the last transfer + * then trigger/enable for this transfer. + * + * If we borrowed a wake TCS for an active-only transfer we'll also call + * this function with "trigger=false" to just do the un-trigger/disable + * before using the TCS for wake purposes again. + * + * Note that the AP is only in charge of triggering active-only transfers. + * The AP never triggers sleep/wake values using this function. + */ static void __tcs_set_trigger(struct rsc_drv *drv, int tcs_id, bool trigger) { u32 enable; @@ -289,6 +365,15 @@ static void __tcs_set_trigger(struct rsc_drv *drv, int tcs_id, bool trigger) } } +/** + * enable_tcs_irq() - Enable or disable interrupts on the given TCS. + * @drv: The controller. + * @tcs_id: The global ID of this TCS. + * @enable: If true then enable; if false then disable + * + * We only ever call this when we borrow a wake TCS for an active-only + * transfer. For active-only TCSes interrupts are always left enabled. + */ static void enable_tcs_irq(struct rsc_drv *drv, int tcs_id, bool enable) { u32 data; @@ -302,7 +387,14 @@ static void enable_tcs_irq(struct rsc_drv *drv, int tcs_id, bool enable) } /** - * tcs_tx_done: TX Done interrupt handler + * tcs_tx_done() - TX Done interrupt handler. + * @irq: The IRQ number (ignored). + * @p: Pointer to "struct rsc_drv". + * + * Called for ACTIVE_ONLY transfers (those are the only ones we enable the + * IRQ for) when a transfer is done. + * + * Return: IRQ_HANDLED */ static irqreturn_t tcs_tx_done(int irq, void *p) { @@ -367,6 +459,16 @@ skip: return IRQ_HANDLED; } +/** + * __tcs_buffer_write() - Write to TCS hardware from a request; don't trigger. + * @drv: The controller. + * @tcs_id: The global ID of this TCS. + * @cmd_id: The index within the TCS to start writing. + * @msg: The message we want to send, which will contain several addr/data + * pairs to program (but few enough that they all fit in one TCS). + * + * This is used for all types of transfers (active, sleep, and wake). + */ static void __tcs_buffer_write(struct rsc_drv *drv, int tcs_id, int cmd_id, const struct tcs_request *msg) { @@ -400,6 +502,26 @@ static void __tcs_buffer_write(struct rsc_drv *drv, int tcs_id, int cmd_id, write_tcs_reg(drv, RSC_DRV_CMD_ENABLE, tcs_id, cmd_enable); } +/** + * check_for_req_inflight() - Look to see if conflicting cmds are in flight. + * @drv: The controller. + * @tcs: A pointer to the tcs_group used for ACTIVE_ONLY transfers. + * @msg: The message we want to send, which will contain several addr/data + * pairs to program (but few enough that they all fit in one TCS). + * + * This will walk through the TCSes in the group and check if any of them + * appear to be sending to addresses referenced in the message. If it finds + * one it'll return -EBUSY. + * + * Only for use for active-only transfers. + * + * Must be called with the drv->lock held since that protects tcs_in_use. + * + * Return: 0 if nothing in flight or -EBUSY if we should try again later. + * The caller must re-enable interrupts between tries since that's + * the only way tcs_is_free() will ever return true and the only way + * RSC_DRV_CMD_ENABLE will ever be cleared. + */ static int check_for_req_inflight(struct rsc_drv *drv, struct tcs_group *tcs, const struct tcs_request *msg) { @@ -426,6 +548,15 @@ static int check_for_req_inflight(struct rsc_drv *drv, struct tcs_group *tcs, return 0; } +/** + * find_free_tcs() - Find free tcs in the given tcs_group; only for active. + * @tcs: A pointer to the active-only tcs_group (or the wake tcs_group if + * we borrowed it because there are zero active-only ones). + * + * Must be called with the drv->lock held since that protects tcs_in_use. + * + * Return: The first tcs that's free. + */ static int find_free_tcs(struct tcs_group *tcs) { int i; @@ -438,6 +569,20 @@ static int find_free_tcs(struct tcs_group *tcs) return -EBUSY; } +/** + * tcs_write() - Store messages into a TCS right now, or return -EBUSY. + * @drv: The controller. + * @msg: The data to be sent. + * + * Grabs a TCS for ACTIVE_ONLY transfers and writes the messages to it. + * + * If there are no free TCSes for ACTIVE_ONLY transfers or if a command for + * the same address is already transferring returns -EBUSY which means the + * client should retry shortly. + * + * Return: 0 on success, -EBUSY if client should retry, or an error. + * Client should have interrupts enabled for a bit before retrying. + */ static int tcs_write(struct rsc_drv *drv, const struct tcs_request *msg) { struct tcs_group *tcs; @@ -491,14 +636,26 @@ done_write: } /** - * rpmh_rsc_send_data: Validate the incoming message and write to the - * appropriate TCS block. + * rpmh_rsc_send_data() - Validate the incoming message + write to TCS block. + * @drv: The controller. + * @msg: The data to be sent. * - * @drv: the controller - * @msg: the data to be sent + * NOTES: + * - This is only used for "ACTIVE_ONLY" since the limitations of this + * function don't make sense for sleep/wake cases. + * - To do the transfer, we will grab a whole TCS for ourselves--we don't + * try to share. If there are none available we'll wait indefinitely + * for a free one. + * - This function will not wait for the commands to be finished, only for + * data to be programmed into the RPMh. See rpmh_tx_done() which will + * be called when the transfer is fully complete. + * - This function must be called with interrupts enabled. If the hardware + * is busy doing someone else's transfer we need that transfer to fully + * finish so that we can have the hardware, and to fully finish it needs + * the interrupt handler to run. If the interrupts is set to run on the + * active CPU this can never happen if interrupts are disabled. * * Return: 0 on success, -EINVAL on error. - * Note: This call blocks until a valid data is written to the TCS. */ int rpmh_rsc_send_data(struct rsc_drv *drv, const struct tcs_request *msg) { @@ -522,13 +679,30 @@ int rpmh_rsc_send_data(struct rsc_drv *drv, const struct tcs_request *msg) return ret; } +/** + * find_slots() - Find a place to write the given message. + * @tcs: The tcs group to search. + * @msg: The message we want to find room for. + * @tcs_id: If we return 0 from the function, we return the global ID of the + * TCS to write to here. + * @cmd_id: If we return 0 from the function, we return the index of + * the command array of the returned TCS where the client should + * start writing the message. + * + * Only for use on sleep/wake TCSes since those are the only ones we maintain + * tcs->slots for. + * + * Must be called with the tcs_lock for the group held. + * + * Return: -ENOMEM if there was no room, else 0. + */ static int find_slots(struct tcs_group *tcs, const struct tcs_request *msg, int *tcs_id, int *cmd_id) { int slot, offset; int i = 0; - /* Do over, until we can fit the full payload in a TCS */ + /* Do over, until we can fit the full payload in a single TCS */ do { slot = bitmap_find_next_zero_area(tcs->slots, MAX_TCS_SLOTS, i, msg->num_cmds, 0); @@ -547,12 +721,14 @@ static int find_slots(struct tcs_group *tcs, const struct tcs_request *msg, } /** - * rpmh_rsc_write_ctrl_data: Write request to the controller + * rpmh_rsc_write_ctrl_data() - Write request to controller but don't trigger. + * @drv: The controller. + * @msg: The data to be written to the controller. * - * @drv: the controller - * @msg: the data to be written to the controller + * This should only be called for for sleep/wake state, never active-only + * state. * - * There is no response returned for writing the request to the controller. + * Return: 0 if no error; else -error. */ int rpmh_rsc_write_ctrl_data(struct rsc_drv *drv, const struct tcs_request *msg) { @@ -587,7 +763,6 @@ int rpmh_rsc_write_ctrl_data(struct rsc_drv *drv, const struct tcs_request *msg) /** * rpmh_rsc_ctrlr_is_busy() - Check if any of the AMCs are busy. - * * @drv: The controller * * Checks if any of the AMCs are busy in handling ACTIVE sets. @@ -624,6 +799,23 @@ static bool rpmh_rsc_ctrlr_is_busy(struct rsc_drv *drv) return false; } +/** + * rpmh_rsc_cpu_pm_callback() - Check if any of the AMCs are busy. + * @nfb: Pointer to the notifier block in struct rsc_drv. + * @action: CPU_PM_ENTER, CPU_PM_ENTER_FAILED, or CPU_PM_EXIT. + * @v: Unused + * + * This function is given to cpu_pm_register_notifier so we can be informed + * about when CPUs go down. When all CPUs go down we know no more active + * transfers will be started so we write sleep/wake sets. This function gets + * called from cpuidle code paths and also at system suspend time. + * + * If its last CPU going down and AMCs are not busy then writes cached sleep + * and wake messages to TCSes. The firmware then takes care of triggering + * them when entering deepest low power modes. + * + * Return: See cpu_pm_register_notifier() + */ static int rpmh_rsc_cpu_pm_callback(struct notifier_block *nfb, unsigned long action, void *v) { |