Re: [PATCH v6 4/4] Bluetooth: hci_bcm: Support pcm params in dts

From: Marcel Holtmann
Date: Tue Nov 19 2019 - 18:42:59 EST


Hi Abhishek,

>>> BCM chips may require configuration of PCM to operate correctly and
>>> there is a vendor specific HCI command to do this. Add support in the
>>> hci_bcm driver to parse this from devicetree and configure the chip.
>>>
>>> Signed-off-by: Abhishek Pandit-Subedi <abhishekpandit@xxxxxxxxxxxx>
>>> ---
>>>
>>> Changes in v6:
>>> - Added btbcm_read_pcm_int_params and change pcm params to first read
>>> the pcm params before setting it
>>>
>>> Changes in v5:
>>> - Rename parameters to bt-* and read as integer instead of bytestring
>>> - Update documentation with defaults and put values in header
>>> - Changed patch order
>>>
>>> Changes in v4:
>>> - Fix incorrect function name in hci_bcm
>>>
>>> Changes in v3:
>>> - Change disallow baudrate setting to return -EBUSY if called before
>>> ready. bcm_proto is no longer modified and is back to being const.
>>> - Changed btbcm_set_pcm_params to btbcm_set_pcm_int_params
>>> - Changed brcm,sco-routing to brcm,bt-sco-routing
>>>
>>> Changes in v2:
>>> - Use match data to disallow baudrate setting
>>> - Parse pcm parameters by name instead of as a byte string
>>> - Fix prefix for dt-bindings commit
>>>
>>> drivers/bluetooth/hci_bcm.c | 57 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
>>> 1 file changed, 57 insertions(+)
>>>
>>> diff --git a/drivers/bluetooth/hci_bcm.c b/drivers/bluetooth/hci_bcm.c
>>> index ee40003008d8..2ce3fac2c5dd 100644
>>> --- a/drivers/bluetooth/hci_bcm.c
>>> +++ b/drivers/bluetooth/hci_bcm.c
>>> @@ -25,6 +25,7 @@
>>> #include <linux/pm_runtime.h>
>>> #include <linux/serdev.h>
>>>
>>> +#include <dt-bindings/bluetooth/brcm.h>
>>> #include <net/bluetooth/bluetooth.h>
>>> #include <net/bluetooth/hci_core.h>
>>>
>>> @@ -88,6 +89,7 @@ struct bcm_device_data {
>>> * used to disable flow control during runtime suspend and system sleep
>>> * @is_suspended: whether flow control is currently disabled
>>> * @no_early_set_baudrate: don't set_baudrate before setup()
>>> + * @pcm_params: PCM and routing parameters
>>> */
>>> struct bcm_device {
>>> /* Must be the first member, hci_serdev.c expects this. */
>>> @@ -122,6 +124,8 @@ struct bcm_device {
>>> bool is_suspended;
>>> #endif
>>> bool no_early_set_baudrate;
>>> +
>>> + struct bcm_set_pcm_int_params pcm_params;
>>> };
>>>
>>> /* generic bcm uart resources */
>>> @@ -541,6 +545,7 @@ static int bcm_flush(struct hci_uart *hu)
>>> static int bcm_setup(struct hci_uart *hu)
>>> {
>>> struct bcm_data *bcm = hu->priv;
>>> + struct bcm_set_pcm_int_params p;
>>> char fw_name[64];
>>> const struct firmware *fw;
>>> unsigned int speed;
>>> @@ -594,6 +599,31 @@ static int bcm_setup(struct hci_uart *hu)
>>> host_set_baudrate(hu, speed);
>>> }
>>>
>>> + /* PCM parameters if any*/
>>> + err = btbcm_read_pcm_int_params(hu->hdev, &p);
>>> + if (!err) {
>>> + if (bcm->dev->pcm_params.routing == 0xff)
>>> + bcm->dev->pcm_params.routing = p.routing;
>>> + if (bcm->dev->pcm_params.rate == 0xff)
>>> + bcm->dev->pcm_params.rate = p.rate;
>>> + if (bcm->dev->pcm_params.frame_sync == 0xff)
>>> + bcm->dev->pcm_params.frame_sync = p.frame_sync;
>>> + if (bcm->dev->pcm_params.sync_mode == 0xff)
>>> + bcm->dev->pcm_params.sync_mode = p.sync_mode;
>>> + if (bcm->dev->pcm_params.clock_mode == 0xff)
>>> + bcm->dev->pcm_params.clock_mode = p.clock_mode;
>>
>> Frankly, I wouldnât bother here. If the read HCI command failed, then we abort bcm_setup and fail the whole procedure. These commands have been around the first Broadcom chips and you can assume they are present. And if at some point they do fail, I want to know about it.
> Ok -- will change to return error if it fails.
>
>>
>>> +
>>> + /* Write only when there are changes */
>>> + if (memcmp(&p, &bcm->dev->pcm_params, sizeof(p)))
>>> + err = btbcm_write_pcm_int_params(hu->hdev,
>>> + &bcm->dev->pcm_params);
>>> +
>>> + if (err)
>>> + bt_dev_warn(hu->hdev, "BCM: Write pcm params failed (%d)",
>>> + err);
>>> + } else
>>> + bt_dev_warn(hu->hdev, "BCM: Read pcm params failed (%d)", err);
>>> +
>>> finalize:
>>> release_firmware(fw);
>>>
>>> @@ -1128,9 +1158,36 @@ static int bcm_acpi_probe(struct bcm_device *dev)
>>> }
>>> #endif /* CONFIG_ACPI */
>>>
>>> +static int property_read_u8(struct device *dev, const char *prop, u8 *value)
>>> +{
>>> + int err;
>>> + u32 tmp;
>>> +
>>> + err = device_property_read_u32(dev, prop, &tmp);
>>> +
>>> + if (!err)
>>> + *value = (u8)tmp;
>>> +
>>> + return err;
>>> +}
>>
>> I think this really needs to be done in the generic property code if this is wanted.
> Yes, this should be device_property_read_u8. For some reason, I
> thought that wasn't working before (I'll have to retest it with
> straight integer values).
>
>>
>>> +
>>> static int bcm_of_probe(struct bcm_device *bdev)
>>> {
>>> device_property_read_u32(bdev->dev, "max-speed", &bdev->oper_speed);
>>> +
>>> + memset(&bdev->pcm_params, 0xff, sizeof(bdev->pcm_params));
>>
>> Scrap this memset. We will read the values first.
>
> I added this memset is bcm_of_probe occurs before patchram and without
> setting some magic value in the pcm_params, we don't know which values
> are valid (since 0 has some meaning in the params).
> It doesn't make sense to me to read pcm params outside setup (I want
> patchram to complete first) and it doesn't make sense to do property
> reads inside setup.

I wonder if we should just fail if bt-sco-routing is PCM and not all values are provided in the DT. Looks like there is no clean way of doing this gracefully otherwise.

Regards

Marcel