On 3/7/2011 4:03 PM, Valkeinen, Tomi wrote:
On Mon, 2011-03-07 at 07:51 -0600, Cousson, Benoit wrote:
+ Rajendra

Hi Tomi,

On 3/7/2011 9:22 AM, Valkeinen, Tomi wrote:
Hi Kevin, Paul,

We currently have a small problem with OMAP4 DSS. When we enable the DSS
clocks, it seems that the DSS registers are not always accessible right
after the clock enable.

What clocks are you talking about? As you know, the DSS has a bunch of
functional clocks available depending of the use case.

In this case the clocks for DISPC, iclk and fclk. On OMAP4 fclk is
DSS_FCLK and iclk is not used, I believe. The problem is probably also
in all the other DSS modules.

I understood that on OMAP4 the clock framework doesn't guarantee that
the registers are accessible after enabling clocks, and pm_runtime will
handle this. Is this correct?

The point is that there is no status at clock level but only one status
at module level. That's why this check does not have anything to do at
clock level.
So hwmod with handle that status (OMAP4430_CM_DSS_DSS_CLKCTRL) during
the hwmod_enable that is indirectly called by pm_runtime, through
omap_device API.

Ah. Ok. How does CM_DSS_DSS_CLKCTRL show that the DSS module is ready?
IDLEST is 0?

Yep, or 2 if only the interface clock is idle and a separate functional clock is running, which is the case of the DSS. You can check the function used in hwmod: omap4_cm_wait_module_ready in cminst44xx.c.

- 0x0 func: Module is fully functional, including OCP
- 0x2 idle: Module is in Idle mode (only OCP part). It is functional if using separate functional clock

I have made a small hack fix for this. I added udelay(10) in the DSS
code which enables the clocks and this seem to remove the problem. The
delay is only called when DSS thinks the clocks have been off, so in
practice the delay shouldn't be visible. Is this fix acceptable for now,
until we get pm_runtime support to DSS?

Cannot you use omap_device for the moment? Relying on a udelay is not a
very safe method, even temporally.

Yes, udelay is not very good option even as a hack, except if we can
wait some amount of time which we know will always be enough. Can we?

You should really avoid that, because we really don't have any good way to get a good number.

I have to say I'm not very familiar with omap_device, as I haven't been
really working with them (nor hwmods). Sumit or Archit can perhaps fill
in, but my understanding is that work on that area is going on, but it's
not ready yet. So I'm looking for some temporary quick solution for this
so that DSS driver doesn't randomly crash on OMAP4.

Adding the check in the clock framework for DSS clock nodes only might be the cleanest way to do that right now.

You can map clock nodes to clkops_omap2_dflt_wait clkops instead of the clkops_omap2_dflt currently used. But then you will have to add the support for OMAP4, since for the moment the function seems to work only for OMAP2 & 3 (omap2_clk_dflt_find_idlest).

It is a little bit more complex than the current WA but should not be that hard either to do. This is a much cleaner WA before having the full hwmod support for the DSS for my point of view.

Paul,
Any thoughts?

Regards,
Benoit
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