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authorDouglas Anderson <dianders@chromium.org>2019-04-11 16:21:53 -0700
committerGreg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@linuxfoundation.org>2019-06-22 08:17:15 +0200
commit72a7c442bdf3598847dd12541ac25d719a83ec5b (patch)
tree38aebdec58f1a2959df3948f80fd8c9b52d2919f /drivers/clk/rockchip
parent5a1de21ca49140ef8088bbb8d322c2ade58ccfac (diff)
clk: rockchip: Turn on "aclk_dmac1" for suspend on rk3288
[ Upstream commit 57a20248ef3e429dc822f0774bc4e00136c46c83 ] Experimentally it can be seen that going into deep sleep (specifically setting PMU_CLR_DMA and PMU_CLR_BUS in RK3288_PMU_PWRMODE_CON1) appears to fail unless "aclk_dmac1" is on. The failure is that the system never signals that it made it into suspend on the GLOBAL_PWROFF pin and it just hangs. NOTE that it's confirmed that it's the actual suspend that fails, not one of the earlier calls to read/write registers. Specifically if you comment out the "PMU_GLOBAL_INT_DISABLE" setting in rk3288_slp_mode_set() and then comment out the "cpu_do_idle()" call in rockchip_lpmode_enter() then you can exercise the whole suspend path without any crashing. This is currently not a problem with suspend upstream because there is no current way to exercise the deep suspend code. However, anyone trying to make it work will run into this issue. This was not a problem on shipping rk3288-based Chromebooks because those devices all ran on an old kernel based on 3.14. On that kernel "aclk_dmac1" appears to be left on all the time. There are several ways to skin this problem. A) We could add "aclk_dmac1" to the list of critical clocks and that apperas to work, but presumably that wastes power. B) We could keep a list of "struct clk" objects to enable at suspend time in clk-rk3288.c and use the standard clock APIs. C) We could make the rk3288-pmu driver keep a list of clocks to enable at suspend time. Presumably this would require a dts and bindings change. D) We could just whack the clock on in the existing syscore suspend function where we whack a bunch of other clocks. This is particularly easy because we know for sure that the clock's only parent ("aclk_cpu") is a critical clock so we don't need to do anything more than ungate it. In this case I have chosen D) because it seemed like the least work, but any of the other options would presumably also work fine. Signed-off-by: Douglas Anderson <dianders@chromium.org> Reviewed-by: Elaine Zhang <zhangqing@rock-chips.com> Signed-off-by: Heiko Stuebner <heiko@sntech.de> Signed-off-by: Sasha Levin <sashal@kernel.org>
Diffstat (limited to 'drivers/clk/rockchip')
-rw-r--r--drivers/clk/rockchip/clk-rk3288.c11
1 files changed, 11 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/drivers/clk/rockchip/clk-rk3288.c b/drivers/clk/rockchip/clk-rk3288.c
index 39af05a589b3..32b130c53ff9 100644
--- a/drivers/clk/rockchip/clk-rk3288.c
+++ b/drivers/clk/rockchip/clk-rk3288.c
@@ -826,6 +826,9 @@ static const int rk3288_saved_cru_reg_ids[] = {
RK3288_CLKSEL_CON(10),
RK3288_CLKSEL_CON(33),
RK3288_CLKSEL_CON(37),
+
+ /* We turn aclk_dmac1 on for suspend; this will restore it */
+ RK3288_CLKGATE_CON(10),
};
static u32 rk3288_saved_cru_regs[ARRAY_SIZE(rk3288_saved_cru_reg_ids)];
@@ -842,6 +845,14 @@ static int rk3288_clk_suspend(void)
}
/*
+ * Going into deep sleep (specifically setting PMU_CLR_DMA in
+ * RK3288_PMU_PWRMODE_CON1) appears to fail unless
+ * "aclk_dmac1" is on.
+ */
+ writel_relaxed(1 << (12 + 16),
+ rk3288_cru_base + RK3288_CLKGATE_CON(10));
+
+ /*
* Switch PLLs other than DPLL (for SDRAM) to slow mode to
* avoid crashes on resume. The Mask ROM on the system will
* put APLL, CPLL, and GPLL into slow mode at resume time