Kever Yang kever.yang@rock-chips.com writes:
Hi Kevin, Heiko,
On 2019/8/22 上午2:59, Kevin Hilman wrote:
Hi Heiko,
Heiko Stuebner heiko@sntech.de writes:
Am Dienstag, 13. August 2019, 19:35:31 CEST schrieb Kevin Hilman:
[ resent with correct addr for linux-rockchip list ]
Mark Brown broonie@kernel.org writes:
On Thu, Jul 18, 2019 at 04:28:08AM -0700, kernelci.org bot wrote:
Today's -next started failing to boot defconfig on rk3399-firefly:
arm64: defconfig: gcc-8: rk3399-firefly: 1 failed lab
It hits a BUG() trying to set up cpufreq:
[ 87.381606] cpufreq: cpufreq_online: CPU0: Running at unlisted freq: 200000 KHz [ 87.393244] cpufreq: cpufreq_online: CPU0: Unlisted initial frequency changed to: 408000 KHz [ 87.469777] cpufreq: cpufreq_online: CPU4: Running at unlisted freq: 12000 KHz [ 87.488595] cpu cpu4: _generic_set_opp_clk_only: failed to set clock rate: -22 [ 87.491881] cpufreq: __target_index: Failed to change cpu frequency: -22 [ 87.495335] ------------[ cut here ]------------ [ 87.496821] kernel BUG at drivers/cpufreq/cpufreq.c:1438! [ 87.498462] Internal error: Oops - BUG: 0 [#1] PREEMPT SMP
I'm struggling to see anything relevant in the diff from yesterday, the unlisted frequency warnings were there in the logs yesterday but no oops and I'm not seeing any changes in cpufreq, clk or anything relevant looking.
Full bootlog and other info can be found here:
I confirm that disabling CPUfreq in the defconfig (CONFIG_CPU_FREQ=n) makes the firefly board start working again.
Note that the default defconfig enables the "performance" CPUfreq governor as the default governor, so during kernel boot, it will always switch to the max frequency.
For fun, I set the default governor to "userspace" so the kernel wouldn't make any OPP changes, and that leads to a slightly more informative splat[1]
There is still an OPP change happening because the detected OPP is not one that's listed in the table, so it tries to change to a listed OPP and fails in the bowels of clk_set_rate()
Though I think that might only be a symptom as well. Both the PLL setting code as well as the actual cpu-clock implementation is unchanged since 2017 (and runs just fine on all boards in my farm).
One source for these issues is often the regulator supplying the cpu going haywire - aka the voltage not matching the opp.
As in this error-case it's CPU4 being set, this would mean it might be the big cluster supplied by the external syr825 (fan5355 clone) that might act up. In the Firefly-rk3399 case this is even stranger.
There is a discrepancy between the "fcs,suspend-voltage-selector" between different bootloader versions (how the selection-pin is set up), so the kernel might actually write his requested voltage to the wrong register (not the one for actual voltage, but the second set used for the suspend voltage).
Did you by chance swap bootloaders at some point in recent past?
No, haven't touched bootloader since I initially setup the board.
The CPU voltage does not affect by bootloader for kernel should have its own opp-table,
the bootloader may only affect the center/logic power supply.
I'd assume [2] might actually be the same issue last year, though the CI-logs are not available anymore it seems.
Could you try to set the vdd_cpu_b regulator to disabled, so that cpufreq for this cluster defers and see what happens?
Yes, this change[1] definitely makes things boot reliably again, so there's defintiely something a bit unstable with this regulator, at least on this firefly.
Is it possible to target which patch introduce this bug? This board should have work correctly for a long time with upstream source code.
Unfortunately, it seems to be a regular, but intermittent failure, so bisection is not producing anything reliable.
You can see that both in mainline[1] and in linux-next[2] there are periodic failures, but it's hard to see any patterns.
I'm starting to think that maybe the regulator on my particular board is just starting to fail, since disabling the regulator for that cluster prevents any voltage changes and makes things reliable again.
If we don't find a solution to this, I'll probably just have to retire this board from my kernelCI lab (of course, I'd be happy to replace it if someone wants to donate another one.) :)
Kevin
[1] https://kernelci.org/boot/rk3399-firefly/job/mainline/ [2] https://kernelci.org/boot/rk3399-firefly/job/next/