Re: [PATCH v4 1/2] Partially revert ASoC: qcom: Fix enabling BCLK and LRCLK in LPAIF invalid state

From: Srinivasa Rao Mandadapu
Date: Tue Dec 01 2020 - 12:32:25 EST


Thanks Mark for your time!!!

On 11/30/2020 6:16 PM, Mark Brown wrote:
On Sat, Nov 28, 2020 at 10:29:18AM +0530, Srinivasa Rao Mandadapu wrote:
This reverts part of commit b1824968221c
("ASoC: qcom: Fix enabling BCLK and LRCLK in LPAIF invalid state")

To identify LPAIF invalid state after device suspend and resume,
made I2S and DMA control registers not volatile, which is not necessary.
Instead invalid reg state can be handled with regcache APIs.
The BCLK ref count is necessary to enable clock only it's in disable state.
Part of this commit message says that the problem was making the registers
non-volatile but both the change and the rest of the commit message say
that the issue was that the registers were made volatile. I'm also
still unclear as to what the issue is either way - how does reading the
state of the registers from the hardware instead of the cache affect
things?

Initial problem was, during playback if device suspended, I2S and DMA control registers

are getting reset and unable to recover playback after resume.

As these registers were non volatile registers, driver is not getting actual register value

and unable to report error state to application. Due to this application

keeps on polling for HW current pointer state and not exited from PCM running state.

To handle this scenario I made registers volatile and if they are in reset state, reported error

to application(commit b1824968221c).

Later from review comments by Srinivas kandagatla, I got to know

about regcache sync APIs, which can be used  to sync cache after resume and

HW registers can be updated with  original values. With that playback can be continued.

So is the reason, I am reverting partial changes in the commit b1824968221c.


Please submit patches using subject lines reflecting the style for the
subsystem, this makes it easier for people to identify relevant patches.
Look at what existing commits in the area you're changing are doing and
make sure your subject lines visually resemble what they're doing.
There's no need to resubmit to fix this alone.

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