On Wed, Aug 14, 2019 at 01:35:27PM +0100, Suzuki K Poulose wrote:
Hi Mike,
On 14/08/2019 12:06, Mike Leach wrote:
Hi,
On Wed, 14 Aug 2019 at 11:01, Andrew Murray andrew.murray@arm.com wrote:
On Sun, Aug 04, 2019 at 07:13:45AM -0600, Mathieu Poirier wrote:
On Fri, 2 Aug 2019 at 08:37, Andrew Murray andrew.murray@arm.com wrote:
On Fri, Aug 02, 2019 at 11:40:54AM +0100, Suzuki K Poulose wrote:
Hi Andrew,
On 30/07/2019 13:51, Andrew Murray wrote: > Some coresight components, because of choices made during hardware > integration, require their state to be saved and restored across CPU low > power states.
...
> --- a/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/arm/coresight.txt > +++ b/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/arm/coresight.txt > @@ -92,6 +92,9 @@ its hardware characteristcs. > * arm,cp14: must be present if the system accesses ETM/PTM management > registers via co-processor 14. > + * arm,coresight-needs-save-restore: boolean. Indicates that software > + should save/restore state across power down. > +
Do you think we could be a bit more descriptive here about when people could add it to the DT ? Here we don't mention when someone should use this property and it may be added to platforms where it may be absolutely unnecessary. How about :
"Indicates that the hardware implementation may not honor the Powerup request from the software and thus might loose the register context on CPU power down (e.g, during CPUIdle). Software must save/restore the context during a CPU power transition cycle."
How about the following:
"Indicates that the hardware will loose register context on CPU power down (e.g. CPUIdle), despite the TRCPDCR.PU bit being set."
I'm keen to avoid making suggestions about what the kernel will do when it sees this flag and thus prefer to focus on describing what the hardware does. So I dropped your last sentence. However the name of the flag still implies policy which I don't like.
I also changed the 'may not honor' wording, I'm not sure if this is really the case or if the spec is open to interpretation.
It would great for this wording to also apply to other CS components though I haven't investigated if these have a PU bit or something different.
Exactly - the definition needs to be broad enough to apply to other CS components. Mike what do you think would be appropriate for CTIs?
CTIs have no power control at all - i.e. no PU bit to request we stay up - and reside in the debug power domain. So they are coupled to the CS/CPU/ETM/ power domains and reliant on outside forces to request power. The expectation is that for a PE bound CTI, if debug is powered then it will be fully powered - so an ETM with PU respected, or the external debug logic with DBGNOPWRDWN respected should be sufficient for CTI to stay alive.
I am trying to understand why we need this property for CTI. Don't we always need to save-restore the CTI controls on a CPU_DOWN for the associated CTI ? Since it may not be really tied to an ETM (e.g, if the CTI is purely used to handle CPU triggers, PMU etc,). If that is the case, do we need this property for CTI at all ?
How about we keep this short and simple:
- arm,coresight-loses-context-with-cpu : boolean. Indicates that the hardware
nit: s/loses/looses ?
Given that lose refers to missing something and loose refers to something not fitting well, I'd have thought the pural is loses. Though I've now looked at these words for too long and nothing makes sense any more...
will lose register context on CPU power down (e.g. CPUIdle).
So the above name is generic enough to encompass the CTI as well.
I could have added something like "... despite TRCPDCR.PU being set", or to apply more generically: "... despite available register controls being set to prevent such context loss". However whilst these are more informative - they elude to some of reasons as to why context is lost and as we cannot be exhaustive I'd rather not give a limited example.
However if a longer explaination is required:
- arm,coresight-loses-context-with-cpu : boolean. Indicates that the hardware will lose register context on CPU power down (e.g. CPUIdle). An example of where this may be needed are systems which contain a coresight component and CPU in the same power domain. When the CPU powers down the coresight component also powers down and loses its context.
This looks fine for me. But I am trying to understand the rationale behind using this for CTI
Thanks.
Thanks,
Andrew Murray
Suzuki