On 29.03.2023 10:34, Johan Hovold wrote:
On Wed, Mar 29, 2023 at 10:56:00AM +0530, Manivannan Sadhasivam wrote:
On Tue, Mar 28, 2023 at 03:09:03PM +0530, Manivannan Sadhasivam wrote:
On Tue, Mar 28, 2023 at 10:54:53AM +0200, Johan Hovold wrote:
On Sat, Mar 25, 2023 at 10:22:13PM +0530, Manivannan Sadhasivam wrote:
Add missing quirks for the USB DWC3 IP.
This is not an acceptable commit message generally and certainly not for something that you have tagged for stable.
At a minimum, you need to describe why these are needed and what the impact is.
I can certainly improve the commit message. But usually the quirks are copied from the downstream devicetree where qualcomm engineers would've added them based on the platform requirements.
Also, why are you sending as part of a series purporting to enable runtime PM when it appears to be all about optimising specific gadget applications?
It's not related to this series I agree but just wanted to group it with a series touching usb so that it won't get lost.
I could respin it separately though in v2.
That's also generally best for USB patches as Greg expects series to be merged through a single tree.
Did you confirm that the below makes any sense or has this just been copied verbatim from the vendor devicetree (it looks like that)?
As you've mentioned, most of the quirks are for gadget mode which is not supported by the upstream supported boards. So I haven't really tested them but for I assumed that Qcom engineers did.
The fact that almost none of the qcom SoCs sets these also indicates that something is not right here.
Cc: stable@vger.kernel.org # 5.20 Fixes: 152d1faf1e2f ("arm64: dts: qcom: add SC8280XP platform") Signed-off-by: Manivannan Sadhasivam manivannan.sadhasivam@linaro.org
arch/arm64/boot/dts/qcom/sc8280xp.dtsi | 14 ++++++++++++++ 1 file changed, 14 insertions(+)
diff --git a/arch/arm64/boot/dts/qcom/sc8280xp.dtsi b/arch/arm64/boot/dts/qcom/sc8280xp.dtsi index 0d02599d8867..266a94c712aa 100644 --- a/arch/arm64/boot/dts/qcom/sc8280xp.dtsi +++ b/arch/arm64/boot/dts/qcom/sc8280xp.dtsi @@ -3040,6 +3040,13 @@ usb_0_dwc3: usb@a600000 { iommus = <&apps_smmu 0x820 0x0>; phys = <&usb_0_hsphy>, <&usb_0_qmpphy QMP_USB43DP_USB3_PHY>; phy-names = "usb2-phy", "usb3-phy";
snps,hird-threshold = /bits/ 8 <0x0>;
snps,usb2-gadget-lpm-disable;
Here you are disabling LPM for gadget mode, which makes most of the other properties entirely pointless.
Checked with Qcom on these quirks. So this one is just disabling lpm for USB2 and rest of the quirks below are for SS/SSP modes.
No, snps,hird-threshold is for USB2 LPM and so is snps,is-utmi-l1-suspend and snps,has-lpm-erratum as you'll see if you look at the implementation.
snps,is-utmi-l1-suspend;
snps,dis-u1-entry-quirk;
snps,dis-u2-entry-quirk;
These appear to be used to optimise certain gadget application and likely not something that should be set in a dtsi.
I will cross check these with Qcom and respin accordingly.
These quirks are needed as per the DWC IP integration with this SoC it seems. But I got the point that these don't add any values for host only configurations. At the same time, these quirks still hold true for the SoC even if not exercised.
So I think we should keep these in the dtsi itself.
Please take a closer look at the quirks you're enabling first. Commit 729dcffd1ed3 ("usb: dwc3: gadget: Add support for disabling U1 and U2 entries") which added
snps,dis-u1-entry-quirk;
snps,dis-u2-entry-quirk;
explicitly mentions
Gadget applications may have a requirement to disable the U1 and U2 entry based on the usecase.
which sounds like something that needs to be done in a per board dts at least.
Perhaps keeping all of these in in the dtsi is correct, but that's going to need some more motivation than simply that some vendor does so (as they often do all sorts of things they should not).
I'm looking at the DWC3 code and admittedly I don't understand much, but is there any harm to keeping them? What if somebody decides to plug in a laptop as a gadget device?
Konrad
Johan