Re: [PATCH RFC 00/11] clk: sunxi: factors clk clean up and refactor

From: Maxime Ripard
Date: Wed Jan 27 2016 - 14:13:33 EST


Hi Chen-Yu,

On Mon, Jan 25, 2016 at 09:15:36PM +0800, Chen-Yu Tsai wrote:
> Hi everyone,
>
> This series cleans up and reworks parts of sunxi's factors clk. The goal
> is to support non-standard formulas for clock rate calculation, such as
> pre-dividers on some parents, or all power-of-2 dividers. One such clock
> is the AHB1 clock on A31/A31s.
>
> Patch 1 is Maxime's patch adding an unregister function for composite
> clocks. Patches 3 and 4 use this, so it is included for completeness.
>
> Patch 2 makes the config tables for factors clk constant. These contain
> the shift and width for the factors. They are used to manipulate the
> clk register values. There should be no reason to change them in-flight.
>
> Patch 3 adds a proper error path for the factors clk register function(),
> so we don't leak memory when a call fails.
>
> Patch 4 adds an unregister function for factors clks.
>
> Patch 5 adds an error patch to sunxi_factors_clk_setup()
>
> Patch 6 packs the parameters passed to get_factors callbacks in a struct.
> This makes it easier to extend factors clk without having to edit all
> the function definitions, and also makes the lines shorter.
>
> Patch 7 makes factors clk support custom formulas for calculating clock
> rates. On the clock rounding/setting side, we only need to teach
> get_factors about different parent clocks. On the recalc side, we add
> support for custom .recalc callbacks for clocks that need them.
>
> Patch 8 drops .round_rate from factors clk ops. Since only one of
> .round_rate and .determine_rate is needed, and the clk core prefers the
> latter, remove .round_rate.
>
> Patch 9 rewrites sun6i-a31-ahb1-clk using factors clk with the new custom
> formula support. sun6i-a31-ahb1 has a pre-divider on one of its parents.
>
> Patch 10 rewrite sun6i-ar100 using factors clk.
>
> Patch 11 rewrites sun8i-a23-mbus-clk using the simpler composite clk.
> While this patch is doing the reverse, i.e. rewriting a factors clk into
> a composite clk, it is included because some changes overlap. I'm not
> sure whether this approach is worthwhile, as it actually adds more code,
> though it might make it easier to understand.

Thanks a lot for working on this.

I'm guessing we could even take a step further, since most of the
clocks are re-using a variation of the factor calculation code. We
roughly end up in a handful of cases (the clocks are just from a quick
look at the A10 and A31 datasheet and the source code, which might
leave a few clocks that we don't support yet in the newer SoCs)

* A single factor:
+ These ones are trivial to handle, a simple division gives us
directly the divisor to use.
+ Clocks in this case:
- A13 AHB (p)
- A80 AHB (p)
- A10 PLL3 (m)
- A31 AHB (m)
- A80 GT (m)

* Two factors:
+ These ones might be a bit more difficult to handle. One case is
quite trivial too, it's the n and m case, where we can use
directly rational_best_approximation() that handles this just
fine.
The other cases are a bit more tricky, but we can always brute
force it, it shouldn't be very difficult to implement or very
long to run.

+ Clocks in the (p + m) case
- A10 APB1
- A20 CLK OUT
- A10 MOD0
- A31 AR100
- A80 APB1

+ Clocks in the (n + k) case
- A10 PLL5
- A31 PLL6

+ Clocks in the (n + m) case
- A10 PLL2
- A31 PLL3
- A31 PLL4
- A31 PLL8
- A31 PLL9
- A31 PLL10

* Three factors
+ There's probably some consolidation that can be done here too,
or to consider brute-forcing the whole thing again. The number
of combinations would probably rise quite a lot, which might
have a quite significant performance hit. I'm not really sure we
care though.

+ Clocks in the (n, k and m) case
- A31 PLL1
- A31 PLL5
- A31 MIPI PLL

+ Clocks in the (n, p and m) case
- A31 pll2
- A80 pll4

* All factors (n, k, p and m)
+ I'm not sure it's worth it in this case. I'd expect the code to
be quite complex and slow to evaluate all the cases.
+ Clocks
- A10 PLL1
- A10 PLL4
- A23 PLL1


So, I guess we could have a default (and overridable) function that
would cover at least the cases where we have a single or two
factors. I think we already have everything we need in the clk_factors
structure, so we shouldn't need to modify each and every clocks.

What do you think about it?
Maxime

--
Maxime Ripard, Free Electrons
Embedded Linux, Kernel and Android engineering
http://free-electrons.com

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