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/*
* linux/arch/arm/mach-omap2/timer.c
*
* OMAP2 GP timer support.
*
* Copyright (C) 2009 Nokia Corporation
*
* Update to use new clocksource/clockevent layers
* Author: Kevin Hilman, MontaVista Software, Inc. <source@mvista.com>
* Copyright (C) 2007 MontaVista Software, Inc.
*
* Original driver:
* Copyright (C) 2005 Nokia Corporation
* Author: Paul Mundt <paul.mundt@nokia.com>
* Juha Yrjölä <juha.yrjola@nokia.com>
* OMAP Dual-mode timer framework support by Timo Teras
*
* Some parts based off of TI's 24xx code:
*
* Copyright (C) 2004-2009 Texas Instruments, Inc.
*
* Roughly modelled after the OMAP1 MPU timer code.
* Added OMAP4 support - Santosh Shilimkar <santosh.shilimkar@ti.com>
*
* This file is subject to the terms and conditions of the GNU General Public
* License. See the file "COPYING" in the main directory of this archive
* for more details.
*/
#include <linux/init.h>
#include <linux/time.h>
#include <linux/interrupt.h>
#include <linux/err.h>
#include <linux/clk.h>
#include <linux/delay.h>
#include <linux/irq.h>
#include <linux/clocksource.h>
#include <linux/clockchips.h>
#include <linux/slab.h>
#include <linux/of.h>
ARM: OMAP: Add DT support for timer driver In order to add device-tree support to the timer driver the following changes were made ... 1. Allocate system timers (used for clock-events and clock-source) based upon timer properties rather than using an hard-coded timer instance ID. To allow this a new helper function called omap_dmtimer_find_by_property() has been added for finding a timer with the particular properties in the device-tree blob. Please note that this is an internal helper function for system timers only to find a timer in the device-tree blob. This cannot be used by device drivers, another API has been added for that (see below). Timers that are allocated for system timers are dynamically disabled at boot time by adding a status property with the value "disabled" to the timer's device-tree node. Please note that when allocating system timers we now pass a timer ID and timer property. The timer ID is only be used for allocating a timer when booting without device-tree. Once device-tree migration is complete, all the timer ID references will be removed. 2. System timer resources (memory and interrupts) are directly obtained from the device-tree timer node when booting with device-tree, so that system timers are no longer reliant upon the OMAP HWMOD framework to provide these resources. 3. If DT blob is present, then let device-tree create the timer devices dynamically. 4. When device-tree is present the "id" field in the platform_device structure (pdev->id) is initialised to -1 and hence cannot be used to identify a timer instance. Due to this the following changes were made ... a). The API omap_dm_timer_request_specific() is not supported when using device-tree, because it uses the device ID to request a specific timer. This function will return an error if called when device-tree is present. Users of this API should use omap_dm_timer_request_by_cap() instead. b). When removing the DMTIMER driver, the timer "id" was used to identify the timer instance. The remove function has been modified to use the device name instead of the "id". 5. When device-tree is present the platform_data structure will be NULL and so check for this. 6. The OMAP timer device tree binding has the following optional parameters ... a). ti,timer-alwon --> Timer is in an always-on power domain b). ti,timer-dsp --> Timer can generate an interrupt to the on-chip DSP c). ti,timer-pwm --> Timer can generate a PWM output d). ti,timer-secure --> Timer is reserved on a secure OMAP device Search for the above parameters and set the appropriate timer attribute flags. Signed-off-by: Jon Hunter <jon-hunter@ti.com>
2012-05-14 09:41:37 -06:00
#include <linux/of_address.h>
#include <linux/of_irq.h>
#include <linux/platform_device.h>
#include <linux/platform_data/dmtimer-omap.h>
#include <linux/sched_clock.h>
#include <asm/mach/time.h>
#include <asm/smp_twd.h>
#include "omap_hwmod.h"
#include "omap_device.h"
#include <plat/counter-32k.h>
#include <plat/dmtimer.h>
#include "omap-pm.h"
ARM: OMAP: Split plat/hardware.h, use local soc.h for omap2+ As the plat and mach includes need to disappear for single zImage work, we need to remove plat/hardware.h. Do this by splitting plat/hardware.h into omap1 and omap2+ specific files. The old plat/hardware.h already has omap1 only defines, so it gets moved to mach/hardware.h for omap1. For omap2+, we use the local soc.h that for now just includes the related SoC headers to keep this patch more readable. Note that the local soc.h still includes plat/cpu.h that can be dealt with in later patches. Let's also include plat/serial.h from common.h for all the board-*.c files. This allows making the include files local later on without patching these files again. Note that only minimal changes are done in this patch for the drivers/watchdog/omap_wdt.c driver to keep things compiling. Further patches are needed to eventually remove cpu_is_omap usage in the drivers. Also only minimal changes are done to sound/soc/omap/* to remove the unneeded includes and to define OMAP44XX_MCPDM_L3_BASE locally so there's no need to include omap44xx.h. While at it, also sort some of the includes in the standard way. Cc: linux-watchdog@vger.kernel.org Cc: alsa-devel@alsa-project.org Cc: Peter Ujfalusi <peter.ujfalusi@ti.com> Cc: Jarkko Nikula <jarkko.nikula@bitmer.com> Cc: Liam Girdwood <lrg@ti.com> Acked-by: Wim Van Sebroeck <wim@iguana.be> Acked-by: Mark Brown <broonie@opensource.wolfsonmicro.com> Signed-off-by: Tony Lindgren <tony@atomide.com>
2012-08-31 11:59:07 -06:00
#include "soc.h"
#include "common.h"
#include "control.h"
#include "powerdomain.h"
#include "omap-secure.h"
#define REALTIME_COUNTER_BASE 0x48243200
#define INCREMENTER_NUMERATOR_OFFSET 0x10
#define INCREMENTER_DENUMERATOR_RELOAD_OFFSET 0x14
#define NUMERATOR_DENUMERATOR_MASK 0xfffff000
/* Clockevent code */
static struct omap_dm_timer clkev;
static struct clock_event_device clockevent_gpt;
/* Clockevent hwmod for am335x and am437x suspend */
static struct omap_hwmod *clockevent_gpt_hwmod;
#ifdef CONFIG_SOC_HAS_REALTIME_COUNTER
static unsigned long arch_timer_freq;
void set_cntfreq(void)
{
omap_smc1(OMAP5_DRA7_MON_SET_CNTFRQ_INDEX, arch_timer_freq);
}
#endif
static irqreturn_t omap2_gp_timer_interrupt(int irq, void *dev_id)
{
struct clock_event_device *evt = &clockevent_gpt;
__omap_dm_timer_write_status(&clkev, OMAP_TIMER_INT_OVERFLOW);
evt->event_handler(evt);
return IRQ_HANDLED;
}
static struct irqaction omap2_gp_timer_irq = {
.name = "gp_timer",
.flags = IRQF_TIMER | IRQF_IRQPOLL,
.handler = omap2_gp_timer_interrupt,
};
static int omap2_gp_timer_set_next_event(unsigned long cycles,
struct clock_event_device *evt)
{
__omap_dm_timer_load_start(&clkev, OMAP_TIMER_CTRL_ST,
0xffffffff - cycles, OMAP_TIMER_POSTED);
return 0;
}
static int omap2_gp_timer_shutdown(struct clock_event_device *evt)
{
__omap_dm_timer_stop(&clkev, OMAP_TIMER_POSTED, clkev.rate);
return 0;
}
static int omap2_gp_timer_set_periodic(struct clock_event_device *evt)
{
u32 period;
__omap_dm_timer_stop(&clkev, OMAP_TIMER_POSTED, clkev.rate);
period = clkev.rate / HZ;
period -= 1;
/* Looks like we need to first set the load value separately */
__omap_dm_timer_write(&clkev, OMAP_TIMER_LOAD_REG, 0xffffffff - period,
OMAP_TIMER_POSTED);
__omap_dm_timer_load_start(&clkev,
OMAP_TIMER_CTRL_AR | OMAP_TIMER_CTRL_ST,
0xffffffff - period, OMAP_TIMER_POSTED);
return 0;
}
static void omap_clkevt_idle(struct clock_event_device *unused)
{
if (!clockevent_gpt_hwmod)
return;
omap_hwmod_idle(clockevent_gpt_hwmod);
}
static void omap_clkevt_unidle(struct clock_event_device *unused)
{
if (!clockevent_gpt_hwmod)
return;
omap_hwmod_enable(clockevent_gpt_hwmod);
__omap_dm_timer_int_enable(&clkev, OMAP_TIMER_INT_OVERFLOW);
}
static struct clock_event_device clockevent_gpt = {
.features = CLOCK_EVT_FEAT_PERIODIC |
CLOCK_EVT_FEAT_ONESHOT,
.rating = 300,
.set_next_event = omap2_gp_timer_set_next_event,
.set_state_shutdown = omap2_gp_timer_shutdown,
.set_state_periodic = omap2_gp_timer_set_periodic,
.set_state_oneshot = omap2_gp_timer_shutdown,
.tick_resume = omap2_gp_timer_shutdown,
};
static const struct of_device_id omap_timer_match[] __initconst = {
{ .compatible = "ti,omap2420-timer", },
{ .compatible = "ti,omap3430-timer", },
{ .compatible = "ti,omap4430-timer", },
{ .compatible = "ti,omap5430-timer", },
{ .compatible = "ti,dm814-timer", },
{ .compatible = "ti,dm816-timer", },
{ .compatible = "ti,am335x-timer", },
{ .compatible = "ti,am335x-timer-1ms", },
ARM: OMAP3: Dynamically disable secure timer nodes for secure devices OMAP3 devices may or may not have security features enabled. Security enabled devices are known as high-secure (HS) and devices without security are known as general purpose (GP). For OMAP3 devices there are 12 general purpose timers available. On secure devices the 12th timer is reserved for secure usage and so cannot be used by the kernel, where as for a GP device it is available. We can detect the OMAP device type, secure or GP, at runtime via an on-chip register. Today, when not using DT, we do not register the 12th timer as a linux device if the device is secure. When using device tree, device tree is going to register all the timer devices it finds in the device tree blob. To prevent device tree from registering 12th timer on a secure OMAP3 device we can add a status property to the timer binding with the value "disabled" at boot time. Note that timer 12 on a OMAP3 device has a property "ti,timer-secure" to indicate that it will not be available on a secure device and so for secure OMAP3 devices, we search for timers with this property and then disable them. Using the prom_add_property() function to dynamically add a property was a recommended approach suggested by Rob Herring [1]. I have tested this on an OMAP3 GP device and faking it to pretend to be a secure device to ensure that any timers marked with "ti,timer-secure" are not registered on boot. I have also made sure that all timers are registered as expected on a GP device by default. [1] http://comments.gmane.org/gmane.linux.ports.arm.omap/79203 Signed-off-by: Jon Hunter <jon-hunter@ti.com>
2012-06-20 14:55:24 -06:00
{ }
};
ARM: OMAP: Add DT support for timer driver In order to add device-tree support to the timer driver the following changes were made ... 1. Allocate system timers (used for clock-events and clock-source) based upon timer properties rather than using an hard-coded timer instance ID. To allow this a new helper function called omap_dmtimer_find_by_property() has been added for finding a timer with the particular properties in the device-tree blob. Please note that this is an internal helper function for system timers only to find a timer in the device-tree blob. This cannot be used by device drivers, another API has been added for that (see below). Timers that are allocated for system timers are dynamically disabled at boot time by adding a status property with the value "disabled" to the timer's device-tree node. Please note that when allocating system timers we now pass a timer ID and timer property. The timer ID is only be used for allocating a timer when booting without device-tree. Once device-tree migration is complete, all the timer ID references will be removed. 2. System timer resources (memory and interrupts) are directly obtained from the device-tree timer node when booting with device-tree, so that system timers are no longer reliant upon the OMAP HWMOD framework to provide these resources. 3. If DT blob is present, then let device-tree create the timer devices dynamically. 4. When device-tree is present the "id" field in the platform_device structure (pdev->id) is initialised to -1 and hence cannot be used to identify a timer instance. Due to this the following changes were made ... a). The API omap_dm_timer_request_specific() is not supported when using device-tree, because it uses the device ID to request a specific timer. This function will return an error if called when device-tree is present. Users of this API should use omap_dm_timer_request_by_cap() instead. b). When removing the DMTIMER driver, the timer "id" was used to identify the timer instance. The remove function has been modified to use the device name instead of the "id". 5. When device-tree is present the platform_data structure will be NULL and so check for this. 6. The OMAP timer device tree binding has the following optional parameters ... a). ti,timer-alwon --> Timer is in an always-on power domain b). ti,timer-dsp --> Timer can generate an interrupt to the on-chip DSP c). ti,timer-pwm --> Timer can generate a PWM output d). ti,timer-secure --> Timer is reserved on a secure OMAP device Search for the above parameters and set the appropriate timer attribute flags. Signed-off-by: Jon Hunter <jon-hunter@ti.com>
2012-05-14 09:41:37 -06:00
/**
* omap_get_timer_dt - get a timer using device-tree
* @match - device-tree match structure for matching a device type
* @property - optional timer property to match
*
* Helper function to get a timer during early boot using device-tree for use
* as kernel system timer. Optionally, the property argument can be used to
* select a timer with a specific property. Once a timer is found then mark
* the timer node in device-tree as disabled, to prevent the kernel from
* registering this timer as a platform device and so no one else can use it.
*/
static struct device_node * __init omap_get_timer_dt(const struct of_device_id *match,
ARM: OMAP: Add DT support for timer driver In order to add device-tree support to the timer driver the following changes were made ... 1. Allocate system timers (used for clock-events and clock-source) based upon timer properties rather than using an hard-coded timer instance ID. To allow this a new helper function called omap_dmtimer_find_by_property() has been added for finding a timer with the particular properties in the device-tree blob. Please note that this is an internal helper function for system timers only to find a timer in the device-tree blob. This cannot be used by device drivers, another API has been added for that (see below). Timers that are allocated for system timers are dynamically disabled at boot time by adding a status property with the value "disabled" to the timer's device-tree node. Please note that when allocating system timers we now pass a timer ID and timer property. The timer ID is only be used for allocating a timer when booting without device-tree. Once device-tree migration is complete, all the timer ID references will be removed. 2. System timer resources (memory and interrupts) are directly obtained from the device-tree timer node when booting with device-tree, so that system timers are no longer reliant upon the OMAP HWMOD framework to provide these resources. 3. If DT blob is present, then let device-tree create the timer devices dynamically. 4. When device-tree is present the "id" field in the platform_device structure (pdev->id) is initialised to -1 and hence cannot be used to identify a timer instance. Due to this the following changes were made ... a). The API omap_dm_timer_request_specific() is not supported when using device-tree, because it uses the device ID to request a specific timer. This function will return an error if called when device-tree is present. Users of this API should use omap_dm_timer_request_by_cap() instead. b). When removing the DMTIMER driver, the timer "id" was used to identify the timer instance. The remove function has been modified to use the device name instead of the "id". 5. When device-tree is present the platform_data structure will be NULL and so check for this. 6. The OMAP timer device tree binding has the following optional parameters ... a). ti,timer-alwon --> Timer is in an always-on power domain b). ti,timer-dsp --> Timer can generate an interrupt to the on-chip DSP c). ti,timer-pwm --> Timer can generate a PWM output d). ti,timer-secure --> Timer is reserved on a secure OMAP device Search for the above parameters and set the appropriate timer attribute flags. Signed-off-by: Jon Hunter <jon-hunter@ti.com>
2012-05-14 09:41:37 -06:00
const char *property)
{
struct device_node *np;
for_each_matching_node(np, match) {
if (!of_device_is_available(np))
ARM: OMAP: Add DT support for timer driver In order to add device-tree support to the timer driver the following changes were made ... 1. Allocate system timers (used for clock-events and clock-source) based upon timer properties rather than using an hard-coded timer instance ID. To allow this a new helper function called omap_dmtimer_find_by_property() has been added for finding a timer with the particular properties in the device-tree blob. Please note that this is an internal helper function for system timers only to find a timer in the device-tree blob. This cannot be used by device drivers, another API has been added for that (see below). Timers that are allocated for system timers are dynamically disabled at boot time by adding a status property with the value "disabled" to the timer's device-tree node. Please note that when allocating system timers we now pass a timer ID and timer property. The timer ID is only be used for allocating a timer when booting without device-tree. Once device-tree migration is complete, all the timer ID references will be removed. 2. System timer resources (memory and interrupts) are directly obtained from the device-tree timer node when booting with device-tree, so that system timers are no longer reliant upon the OMAP HWMOD framework to provide these resources. 3. If DT blob is present, then let device-tree create the timer devices dynamically. 4. When device-tree is present the "id" field in the platform_device structure (pdev->id) is initialised to -1 and hence cannot be used to identify a timer instance. Due to this the following changes were made ... a). The API omap_dm_timer_request_specific() is not supported when using device-tree, because it uses the device ID to request a specific timer. This function will return an error if called when device-tree is present. Users of this API should use omap_dm_timer_request_by_cap() instead. b). When removing the DMTIMER driver, the timer "id" was used to identify the timer instance. The remove function has been modified to use the device name instead of the "id". 5. When device-tree is present the platform_data structure will be NULL and so check for this. 6. The OMAP timer device tree binding has the following optional parameters ... a). ti,timer-alwon --> Timer is in an always-on power domain b). ti,timer-dsp --> Timer can generate an interrupt to the on-chip DSP c). ti,timer-pwm --> Timer can generate a PWM output d). ti,timer-secure --> Timer is reserved on a secure OMAP device Search for the above parameters and set the appropriate timer attribute flags. Signed-off-by: Jon Hunter <jon-hunter@ti.com>
2012-05-14 09:41:37 -06:00
continue;
if (property && !of_get_property(np, property, NULL))
ARM: OMAP: Add DT support for timer driver In order to add device-tree support to the timer driver the following changes were made ... 1. Allocate system timers (used for clock-events and clock-source) based upon timer properties rather than using an hard-coded timer instance ID. To allow this a new helper function called omap_dmtimer_find_by_property() has been added for finding a timer with the particular properties in the device-tree blob. Please note that this is an internal helper function for system timers only to find a timer in the device-tree blob. This cannot be used by device drivers, another API has been added for that (see below). Timers that are allocated for system timers are dynamically disabled at boot time by adding a status property with the value "disabled" to the timer's device-tree node. Please note that when allocating system timers we now pass a timer ID and timer property. The timer ID is only be used for allocating a timer when booting without device-tree. Once device-tree migration is complete, all the timer ID references will be removed. 2. System timer resources (memory and interrupts) are directly obtained from the device-tree timer node when booting with device-tree, so that system timers are no longer reliant upon the OMAP HWMOD framework to provide these resources. 3. If DT blob is present, then let device-tree create the timer devices dynamically. 4. When device-tree is present the "id" field in the platform_device structure (pdev->id) is initialised to -1 and hence cannot be used to identify a timer instance. Due to this the following changes were made ... a). The API omap_dm_timer_request_specific() is not supported when using device-tree, because it uses the device ID to request a specific timer. This function will return an error if called when device-tree is present. Users of this API should use omap_dm_timer_request_by_cap() instead. b). When removing the DMTIMER driver, the timer "id" was used to identify the timer instance. The remove function has been modified to use the device name instead of the "id". 5. When device-tree is present the platform_data structure will be NULL and so check for this. 6. The OMAP timer device tree binding has the following optional parameters ... a). ti,timer-alwon --> Timer is in an always-on power domain b). ti,timer-dsp --> Timer can generate an interrupt to the on-chip DSP c). ti,timer-pwm --> Timer can generate a PWM output d). ti,timer-secure --> Timer is reserved on a secure OMAP device Search for the above parameters and set the appropriate timer attribute flags. Signed-off-by: Jon Hunter <jon-hunter@ti.com>
2012-05-14 09:41:37 -06:00
continue;
ARM: OMAP3: Update clocksource timer selection When booting with device-tree for OMAP3 and AM335x devices and a gptimer is used as the clocksource (which is always the case for AM335x), a gptimer located in a power domain that is not always-on is selected. Ideally we should use a gptimer for clocksource that is located in a power domain that is always on (such as the wake-up domain) so that time can be maintained during a kernel suspend without keeping on additional power domains unnecessarily. In order to fix this so that we can select a gptimer located in a power domain that is always-on, the following changes were made ... 1. Currently, only when selecting a gptimer to use for a clockevent timer, do we pass a timer property that can be used to select a specific gptimer. Change this so that we can pass a property when selecting a gptimer to use for a clocksource timer too. 2. Currently, when selecting either a gptimer to use for a clockevent timer or a clocksource timer and no timer property is passed, then the first available timer is selected regardless of the properties it has. Change this so that if no properties are passed, then a timer that does not have additional features (such as always-on, dsp-irq, pwm, and secure) is selected. For OMAP3 and AM335x devices that use a gptimer for clocksource, change the selection of the gptimer so that by default the gptimer located in the always-on power domain is used for clocksource instead of clockevents. Please note that using a gptimer for both clocksource and clockevents can have a system power impact during idle. The reason being is that OMAP and AMxxx devices typically only have one gptimer in a power domain that is always-on. Therefore when the kernel is idle both the clocksource and clockevent timers will be active and this will keep additional power domains on. During kernel suspend, only the clocksource timer is active and therefore, it is better to use a gptimer in a power domain that is always-on for clocksource. Signed-off-by: Jon Hunter <jon-hunter@ti.com> Acked-by: Santosh Shilimkar <santosh.shilimkar@ti.com> Acked-by: Igor Grinberg <grinberg@compulab.co.il>
2013-01-28 16:53:57 -07:00
if (!property && (of_get_property(np, "ti,timer-alwon", NULL) ||
of_get_property(np, "ti,timer-dsp", NULL) ||
of_get_property(np, "ti,timer-pwm", NULL) ||
of_get_property(np, "ti,timer-secure", NULL)))
continue;
if (!of_device_is_compatible(np, "ti,omap-counter32k")) {
struct property *prop;
prop = kzalloc(sizeof(*prop), GFP_KERNEL);
if (!prop)
return NULL;
prop->name = "status";
prop->value = "disabled";
prop->length = strlen(prop->value);
of_add_property(np, prop);
}
ARM: OMAP: Add DT support for timer driver In order to add device-tree support to the timer driver the following changes were made ... 1. Allocate system timers (used for clock-events and clock-source) based upon timer properties rather than using an hard-coded timer instance ID. To allow this a new helper function called omap_dmtimer_find_by_property() has been added for finding a timer with the particular properties in the device-tree blob. Please note that this is an internal helper function for system timers only to find a timer in the device-tree blob. This cannot be used by device drivers, another API has been added for that (see below). Timers that are allocated for system timers are dynamically disabled at boot time by adding a status property with the value "disabled" to the timer's device-tree node. Please note that when allocating system timers we now pass a timer ID and timer property. The timer ID is only be used for allocating a timer when booting without device-tree. Once device-tree migration is complete, all the timer ID references will be removed. 2. System timer resources (memory and interrupts) are directly obtained from the device-tree timer node when booting with device-tree, so that system timers are no longer reliant upon the OMAP HWMOD framework to provide these resources. 3. If DT blob is present, then let device-tree create the timer devices dynamically. 4. When device-tree is present the "id" field in the platform_device structure (pdev->id) is initialised to -1 and hence cannot be used to identify a timer instance. Due to this the following changes were made ... a). The API omap_dm_timer_request_specific() is not supported when using device-tree, because it uses the device ID to request a specific timer. This function will return an error if called when device-tree is present. Users of this API should use omap_dm_timer_request_by_cap() instead. b). When removing the DMTIMER driver, the timer "id" was used to identify the timer instance. The remove function has been modified to use the device name instead of the "id". 5. When device-tree is present the platform_data structure will be NULL and so check for this. 6. The OMAP timer device tree binding has the following optional parameters ... a). ti,timer-alwon --> Timer is in an always-on power domain b). ti,timer-dsp --> Timer can generate an interrupt to the on-chip DSP c). ti,timer-pwm --> Timer can generate a PWM output d). ti,timer-secure --> Timer is reserved on a secure OMAP device Search for the above parameters and set the appropriate timer attribute flags. Signed-off-by: Jon Hunter <jon-hunter@ti.com>
2012-05-14 09:41:37 -06:00
return np;
}
return NULL;
}
ARM: OMAP3: Dynamically disable secure timer nodes for secure devices OMAP3 devices may or may not have security features enabled. Security enabled devices are known as high-secure (HS) and devices without security are known as general purpose (GP). For OMAP3 devices there are 12 general purpose timers available. On secure devices the 12th timer is reserved for secure usage and so cannot be used by the kernel, where as for a GP device it is available. We can detect the OMAP device type, secure or GP, at runtime via an on-chip register. Today, when not using DT, we do not register the 12th timer as a linux device if the device is secure. When using device tree, device tree is going to register all the timer devices it finds in the device tree blob. To prevent device tree from registering 12th timer on a secure OMAP3 device we can add a status property to the timer binding with the value "disabled" at boot time. Note that timer 12 on a OMAP3 device has a property "ti,timer-secure" to indicate that it will not be available on a secure device and so for secure OMAP3 devices, we search for timers with this property and then disable them. Using the prom_add_property() function to dynamically add a property was a recommended approach suggested by Rob Herring [1]. I have tested this on an OMAP3 GP device and faking it to pretend to be a secure device to ensure that any timers marked with "ti,timer-secure" are not registered on boot. I have also made sure that all timers are registered as expected on a GP device by default. [1] http://comments.gmane.org/gmane.linux.ports.arm.omap/79203 Signed-off-by: Jon Hunter <jon-hunter@ti.com>
2012-06-20 14:55:24 -06:00
/**
* omap_dmtimer_init - initialisation function when device tree is used
*
* For secure OMAP3/DRA7xx devices, timers with device type "timer-secure"
* cannot be used by the kernel as they are reserved. Therefore, to prevent the
ARM: OMAP3: Dynamically disable secure timer nodes for secure devices OMAP3 devices may or may not have security features enabled. Security enabled devices are known as high-secure (HS) and devices without security are known as general purpose (GP). For OMAP3 devices there are 12 general purpose timers available. On secure devices the 12th timer is reserved for secure usage and so cannot be used by the kernel, where as for a GP device it is available. We can detect the OMAP device type, secure or GP, at runtime via an on-chip register. Today, when not using DT, we do not register the 12th timer as a linux device if the device is secure. When using device tree, device tree is going to register all the timer devices it finds in the device tree blob. To prevent device tree from registering 12th timer on a secure OMAP3 device we can add a status property to the timer binding with the value "disabled" at boot time. Note that timer 12 on a OMAP3 device has a property "ti,timer-secure" to indicate that it will not be available on a secure device and so for secure OMAP3 devices, we search for timers with this property and then disable them. Using the prom_add_property() function to dynamically add a property was a recommended approach suggested by Rob Herring [1]. I have tested this on an OMAP3 GP device and faking it to pretend to be a secure device to ensure that any timers marked with "ti,timer-secure" are not registered on boot. I have also made sure that all timers are registered as expected on a GP device by default. [1] http://comments.gmane.org/gmane.linux.ports.arm.omap/79203 Signed-off-by: Jon Hunter <jon-hunter@ti.com>
2012-06-20 14:55:24 -06:00
* kernel registering these devices remove them dynamically from the device
* tree on boot.
*/
static void __init omap_dmtimer_init(void)
ARM: OMAP3: Dynamically disable secure timer nodes for secure devices OMAP3 devices may or may not have security features enabled. Security enabled devices are known as high-secure (HS) and devices without security are known as general purpose (GP). For OMAP3 devices there are 12 general purpose timers available. On secure devices the 12th timer is reserved for secure usage and so cannot be used by the kernel, where as for a GP device it is available. We can detect the OMAP device type, secure or GP, at runtime via an on-chip register. Today, when not using DT, we do not register the 12th timer as a linux device if the device is secure. When using device tree, device tree is going to register all the timer devices it finds in the device tree blob. To prevent device tree from registering 12th timer on a secure OMAP3 device we can add a status property to the timer binding with the value "disabled" at boot time. Note that timer 12 on a OMAP3 device has a property "ti,timer-secure" to indicate that it will not be available on a secure device and so for secure OMAP3 devices, we search for timers with this property and then disable them. Using the prom_add_property() function to dynamically add a property was a recommended approach suggested by Rob Herring [1]. I have tested this on an OMAP3 GP device and faking it to pretend to be a secure device to ensure that any timers marked with "ti,timer-secure" are not registered on boot. I have also made sure that all timers are registered as expected on a GP device by default. [1] http://comments.gmane.org/gmane.linux.ports.arm.omap/79203 Signed-off-by: Jon Hunter <jon-hunter@ti.com>
2012-06-20 14:55:24 -06:00
{
struct device_node *np;
if (!cpu_is_omap34xx() && !soc_is_dra7xx())
ARM: OMAP3: Dynamically disable secure timer nodes for secure devices OMAP3 devices may or may not have security features enabled. Security enabled devices are known as high-secure (HS) and devices without security are known as general purpose (GP). For OMAP3 devices there are 12 general purpose timers available. On secure devices the 12th timer is reserved for secure usage and so cannot be used by the kernel, where as for a GP device it is available. We can detect the OMAP device type, secure or GP, at runtime via an on-chip register. Today, when not using DT, we do not register the 12th timer as a linux device if the device is secure. When using device tree, device tree is going to register all the timer devices it finds in the device tree blob. To prevent device tree from registering 12th timer on a secure OMAP3 device we can add a status property to the timer binding with the value "disabled" at boot time. Note that timer 12 on a OMAP3 device has a property "ti,timer-secure" to indicate that it will not be available on a secure device and so for secure OMAP3 devices, we search for timers with this property and then disable them. Using the prom_add_property() function to dynamically add a property was a recommended approach suggested by Rob Herring [1]. I have tested this on an OMAP3 GP device and faking it to pretend to be a secure device to ensure that any timers marked with "ti,timer-secure" are not registered on boot. I have also made sure that all timers are registered as expected on a GP device by default. [1] http://comments.gmane.org/gmane.linux.ports.arm.omap/79203 Signed-off-by: Jon Hunter <jon-hunter@ti.com>
2012-06-20 14:55:24 -06:00
return;
/* If we are a secure device, remove any secure timer nodes */
if ((omap_type() != OMAP2_DEVICE_TYPE_GP)) {
ARM: OMAP: Add DT support for timer driver In order to add device-tree support to the timer driver the following changes were made ... 1. Allocate system timers (used for clock-events and clock-source) based upon timer properties rather than using an hard-coded timer instance ID. To allow this a new helper function called omap_dmtimer_find_by_property() has been added for finding a timer with the particular properties in the device-tree blob. Please note that this is an internal helper function for system timers only to find a timer in the device-tree blob. This cannot be used by device drivers, another API has been added for that (see below). Timers that are allocated for system timers are dynamically disabled at boot time by adding a status property with the value "disabled" to the timer's device-tree node. Please note that when allocating system timers we now pass a timer ID and timer property. The timer ID is only be used for allocating a timer when booting without device-tree. Once device-tree migration is complete, all the timer ID references will be removed. 2. System timer resources (memory and interrupts) are directly obtained from the device-tree timer node when booting with device-tree, so that system timers are no longer reliant upon the OMAP HWMOD framework to provide these resources. 3. If DT blob is present, then let device-tree create the timer devices dynamically. 4. When device-tree is present the "id" field in the platform_device structure (pdev->id) is initialised to -1 and hence cannot be used to identify a timer instance. Due to this the following changes were made ... a). The API omap_dm_timer_request_specific() is not supported when using device-tree, because it uses the device ID to request a specific timer. This function will return an error if called when device-tree is present. Users of this API should use omap_dm_timer_request_by_cap() instead. b). When removing the DMTIMER driver, the timer "id" was used to identify the timer instance. The remove function has been modified to use the device name instead of the "id". 5. When device-tree is present the platform_data structure will be NULL and so check for this. 6. The OMAP timer device tree binding has the following optional parameters ... a). ti,timer-alwon --> Timer is in an always-on power domain b). ti,timer-dsp --> Timer can generate an interrupt to the on-chip DSP c). ti,timer-pwm --> Timer can generate a PWM output d). ti,timer-secure --> Timer is reserved on a secure OMAP device Search for the above parameters and set the appropriate timer attribute flags. Signed-off-by: Jon Hunter <jon-hunter@ti.com>
2012-05-14 09:41:37 -06:00
np = omap_get_timer_dt(omap_timer_match, "ti,timer-secure");
of_node_put(np);
ARM: OMAP3: Dynamically disable secure timer nodes for secure devices OMAP3 devices may or may not have security features enabled. Security enabled devices are known as high-secure (HS) and devices without security are known as general purpose (GP). For OMAP3 devices there are 12 general purpose timers available. On secure devices the 12th timer is reserved for secure usage and so cannot be used by the kernel, where as for a GP device it is available. We can detect the OMAP device type, secure or GP, at runtime via an on-chip register. Today, when not using DT, we do not register the 12th timer as a linux device if the device is secure. When using device tree, device tree is going to register all the timer devices it finds in the device tree blob. To prevent device tree from registering 12th timer on a secure OMAP3 device we can add a status property to the timer binding with the value "disabled" at boot time. Note that timer 12 on a OMAP3 device has a property "ti,timer-secure" to indicate that it will not be available on a secure device and so for secure OMAP3 devices, we search for timers with this property and then disable them. Using the prom_add_property() function to dynamically add a property was a recommended approach suggested by Rob Herring [1]. I have tested this on an OMAP3 GP device and faking it to pretend to be a secure device to ensure that any timers marked with "ti,timer-secure" are not registered on boot. I have also made sure that all timers are registered as expected on a GP device by default. [1] http://comments.gmane.org/gmane.linux.ports.arm.omap/79203 Signed-off-by: Jon Hunter <jon-hunter@ti.com>
2012-06-20 14:55:24 -06:00
}
}
ARM: OMAP3+: Implement timer workaround for errata i103 and i767 Errata Titles: i103: Delay needed to read some GP timer, WD timer and sync timer registers after wakeup (OMAP3/4) i767: Delay needed to read some GP timer registers after wakeup (OMAP5) Description (i103/i767): If a General Purpose Timer (GPTimer) is in posted mode (TSICR [2].POSTED=1), due to internal resynchronizations, values read in TCRR, TCAR1 and TCAR2 registers right after the timer interface clock (L4) goes from stopped to active may not return the expected values. The most common event leading to this situation occurs upon wake up from idle. GPTimer non-posted synchronization mode is not impacted by this limitation. Workarounds: 1). Disable posted mode 2). Use static dependency between timer clock domain and MPUSS clock domain 3). Use no-idle mode when the timer is active Workarounds #2 and #3 are not pratical from a power standpoint and so workaround #1 has been implemented. Disabling posted mode adds some CPU overhead for configuring and reading the timers as the CPU has to wait for accesses to be re-synchronised within the timer. However, disabling posted mode guarantees correct operation. Please note that it is safe to use posted mode for timers if the counter (TCRR) and capture (TCARx) registers will never be read. An example of this is the clock-event system timer. This is used by the kernel to schedule events however, the timers counter is never read and capture registers are not used. Given that the kernel configures this timer often yet never reads the counter register it is safe to enable posted mode in this case. Hence, for the timer used for kernel clock-events, posted mode is enabled by overriding the errata for devices that are impacted by this defect. For drivers using the timers that do not read the counter or capture registers and wish to use posted mode, can override the errata and enable posted mode by making the following function calls. __omap_dm_timer_override_errata(timer, OMAP_TIMER_ERRATA_I103_I767); __omap_dm_timer_enable_posted(timer); Both dmtimers and watchdogs are impacted by this defect this patch only implements the workaround for the dmtimer. Currently the watchdog driver does not read the counter register and so no workaround is necessary. Posted mode will be disabled for all OMAP2+ devices (including AM33xx) using a GP timer as a clock-source timer to guarantee correct operation. This is not necessary for OMAP24xx devices but the default clock-source timer for OMAP24xx devices is the 32k-sync timer and not the GP timer and so should not have any impact. This should be re-visited for future devices if this errata is fixed. Confirmed with Vaibhav Hiremath that this bug also impacts AM33xx devices. Signed-off-by: Jon Hunter <jon-hunter@ti.com> Acked-by: Santosh Shilimkar <santosh.shilimkar@ti.com>
2012-09-27 11:47:43 -06:00
/**
* omap_dm_timer_get_errata - get errata flags for a timer
*
* Get the timer errata flags that are specific to the OMAP device being used.
*/
static u32 __init omap_dm_timer_get_errata(void)
ARM: OMAP3+: Implement timer workaround for errata i103 and i767 Errata Titles: i103: Delay needed to read some GP timer, WD timer and sync timer registers after wakeup (OMAP3/4) i767: Delay needed to read some GP timer registers after wakeup (OMAP5) Description (i103/i767): If a General Purpose Timer (GPTimer) is in posted mode (TSICR [2].POSTED=1), due to internal resynchronizations, values read in TCRR, TCAR1 and TCAR2 registers right after the timer interface clock (L4) goes from stopped to active may not return the expected values. The most common event leading to this situation occurs upon wake up from idle. GPTimer non-posted synchronization mode is not impacted by this limitation. Workarounds: 1). Disable posted mode 2). Use static dependency between timer clock domain and MPUSS clock domain 3). Use no-idle mode when the timer is active Workarounds #2 and #3 are not pratical from a power standpoint and so workaround #1 has been implemented. Disabling posted mode adds some CPU overhead for configuring and reading the timers as the CPU has to wait for accesses to be re-synchronised within the timer. However, disabling posted mode guarantees correct operation. Please note that it is safe to use posted mode for timers if the counter (TCRR) and capture (TCARx) registers will never be read. An example of this is the clock-event system timer. This is used by the kernel to schedule events however, the timers counter is never read and capture registers are not used. Given that the kernel configures this timer often yet never reads the counter register it is safe to enable posted mode in this case. Hence, for the timer used for kernel clock-events, posted mode is enabled by overriding the errata for devices that are impacted by this defect. For drivers using the timers that do not read the counter or capture registers and wish to use posted mode, can override the errata and enable posted mode by making the following function calls. __omap_dm_timer_override_errata(timer, OMAP_TIMER_ERRATA_I103_I767); __omap_dm_timer_enable_posted(timer); Both dmtimers and watchdogs are impacted by this defect this patch only implements the workaround for the dmtimer. Currently the watchdog driver does not read the counter register and so no workaround is necessary. Posted mode will be disabled for all OMAP2+ devices (including AM33xx) using a GP timer as a clock-source timer to guarantee correct operation. This is not necessary for OMAP24xx devices but the default clock-source timer for OMAP24xx devices is the 32k-sync timer and not the GP timer and so should not have any impact. This should be re-visited for future devices if this errata is fixed. Confirmed with Vaibhav Hiremath that this bug also impacts AM33xx devices. Signed-off-by: Jon Hunter <jon-hunter@ti.com> Acked-by: Santosh Shilimkar <santosh.shilimkar@ti.com>
2012-09-27 11:47:43 -06:00
{
if (cpu_is_omap24xx())
return 0;
return OMAP_TIMER_ERRATA_I103_I767;
}
static int __init omap_dm_timer_init_one(struct omap_dm_timer *timer,
const char *fck_source,
const char *property,
const char **timer_name,
int posted)
{
const char *oh_name = NULL;
ARM: OMAP: Add DT support for timer driver In order to add device-tree support to the timer driver the following changes were made ... 1. Allocate system timers (used for clock-events and clock-source) based upon timer properties rather than using an hard-coded timer instance ID. To allow this a new helper function called omap_dmtimer_find_by_property() has been added for finding a timer with the particular properties in the device-tree blob. Please note that this is an internal helper function for system timers only to find a timer in the device-tree blob. This cannot be used by device drivers, another API has been added for that (see below). Timers that are allocated for system timers are dynamically disabled at boot time by adding a status property with the value "disabled" to the timer's device-tree node. Please note that when allocating system timers we now pass a timer ID and timer property. The timer ID is only be used for allocating a timer when booting without device-tree. Once device-tree migration is complete, all the timer ID references will be removed. 2. System timer resources (memory and interrupts) are directly obtained from the device-tree timer node when booting with device-tree, so that system timers are no longer reliant upon the OMAP HWMOD framework to provide these resources. 3. If DT blob is present, then let device-tree create the timer devices dynamically. 4. When device-tree is present the "id" field in the platform_device structure (pdev->id) is initialised to -1 and hence cannot be used to identify a timer instance. Due to this the following changes were made ... a). The API omap_dm_timer_request_specific() is not supported when using device-tree, because it uses the device ID to request a specific timer. This function will return an error if called when device-tree is present. Users of this API should use omap_dm_timer_request_by_cap() instead. b). When removing the DMTIMER driver, the timer "id" was used to identify the timer instance. The remove function has been modified to use the device name instead of the "id". 5. When device-tree is present the platform_data structure will be NULL and so check for this. 6. The OMAP timer device tree binding has the following optional parameters ... a). ti,timer-alwon --> Timer is in an always-on power domain b). ti,timer-dsp --> Timer can generate an interrupt to the on-chip DSP c). ti,timer-pwm --> Timer can generate a PWM output d). ti,timer-secure --> Timer is reserved on a secure OMAP device Search for the above parameters and set the appropriate timer attribute flags. Signed-off-by: Jon Hunter <jon-hunter@ti.com>
2012-05-14 09:41:37 -06:00
struct device_node *np;
struct omap_hwmod *oh;
struct clk *src;
int r = 0;
np = omap_get_timer_dt(omap_timer_match, property);
if (!np)
return -ENODEV;
ARM: OMAP: Add DT support for timer driver In order to add device-tree support to the timer driver the following changes were made ... 1. Allocate system timers (used for clock-events and clock-source) based upon timer properties rather than using an hard-coded timer instance ID. To allow this a new helper function called omap_dmtimer_find_by_property() has been added for finding a timer with the particular properties in the device-tree blob. Please note that this is an internal helper function for system timers only to find a timer in the device-tree blob. This cannot be used by device drivers, another API has been added for that (see below). Timers that are allocated for system timers are dynamically disabled at boot time by adding a status property with the value "disabled" to the timer's device-tree node. Please note that when allocating system timers we now pass a timer ID and timer property. The timer ID is only be used for allocating a timer when booting without device-tree. Once device-tree migration is complete, all the timer ID references will be removed. 2. System timer resources (memory and interrupts) are directly obtained from the device-tree timer node when booting with device-tree, so that system timers are no longer reliant upon the OMAP HWMOD framework to provide these resources. 3. If DT blob is present, then let device-tree create the timer devices dynamically. 4. When device-tree is present the "id" field in the platform_device structure (pdev->id) is initialised to -1 and hence cannot be used to identify a timer instance. Due to this the following changes were made ... a). The API omap_dm_timer_request_specific() is not supported when using device-tree, because it uses the device ID to request a specific timer. This function will return an error if called when device-tree is present. Users of this API should use omap_dm_timer_request_by_cap() instead. b). When removing the DMTIMER driver, the timer "id" was used to identify the timer instance. The remove function has been modified to use the device name instead of the "id". 5. When device-tree is present the platform_data structure will be NULL and so check for this. 6. The OMAP timer device tree binding has the following optional parameters ... a). ti,timer-alwon --> Timer is in an always-on power domain b). ti,timer-dsp --> Timer can generate an interrupt to the on-chip DSP c). ti,timer-pwm --> Timer can generate a PWM output d). ti,timer-secure --> Timer is reserved on a secure OMAP device Search for the above parameters and set the appropriate timer attribute flags. Signed-off-by: Jon Hunter <jon-hunter@ti.com>
2012-05-14 09:41:37 -06:00
of_property_read_string_index(np, "ti,hwmods", 0, &oh_name);
if (!oh_name)
return -ENODEV;
ARM: OMAP: Add DT support for timer driver In order to add device-tree support to the timer driver the following changes were made ... 1. Allocate system timers (used for clock-events and clock-source) based upon timer properties rather than using an hard-coded timer instance ID. To allow this a new helper function called omap_dmtimer_find_by_property() has been added for finding a timer with the particular properties in the device-tree blob. Please note that this is an internal helper function for system timers only to find a timer in the device-tree blob. This cannot be used by device drivers, another API has been added for that (see below). Timers that are allocated for system timers are dynamically disabled at boot time by adding a status property with the value "disabled" to the timer's device-tree node. Please note that when allocating system timers we now pass a timer ID and timer property. The timer ID is only be used for allocating a timer when booting without device-tree. Once device-tree migration is complete, all the timer ID references will be removed. 2. System timer resources (memory and interrupts) are directly obtained from the device-tree timer node when booting with device-tree, so that system timers are no longer reliant upon the OMAP HWMOD framework to provide these resources. 3. If DT blob is present, then let device-tree create the timer devices dynamically. 4. When device-tree is present the "id" field in the platform_device structure (pdev->id) is initialised to -1 and hence cannot be used to identify a timer instance. Due to this the following changes were made ... a). The API omap_dm_timer_request_specific() is not supported when using device-tree, because it uses the device ID to request a specific timer. This function will return an error if called when device-tree is present. Users of this API should use omap_dm_timer_request_by_cap() instead. b). When removing the DMTIMER driver, the timer "id" was used to identify the timer instance. The remove function has been modified to use the device name instead of the "id". 5. When device-tree is present the platform_data structure will be NULL and so check for this. 6. The OMAP timer device tree binding has the following optional parameters ... a). ti,timer-alwon --> Timer is in an always-on power domain b). ti,timer-dsp --> Timer can generate an interrupt to the on-chip DSP c). ti,timer-pwm --> Timer can generate a PWM output d). ti,timer-secure --> Timer is reserved on a secure OMAP device Search for the above parameters and set the appropriate timer attribute flags. Signed-off-by: Jon Hunter <jon-hunter@ti.com>
2012-05-14 09:41:37 -06:00
timer->irq = irq_of_parse_and_map(np, 0);
if (!timer->irq)
return -ENXIO;
ARM: OMAP: Add DT support for timer driver In order to add device-tree support to the timer driver the following changes were made ... 1. Allocate system timers (used for clock-events and clock-source) based upon timer properties rather than using an hard-coded timer instance ID. To allow this a new helper function called omap_dmtimer_find_by_property() has been added for finding a timer with the particular properties in the device-tree blob. Please note that this is an internal helper function for system timers only to find a timer in the device-tree blob. This cannot be used by device drivers, another API has been added for that (see below). Timers that are allocated for system timers are dynamically disabled at boot time by adding a status property with the value "disabled" to the timer's device-tree node. Please note that when allocating system timers we now pass a timer ID and timer property. The timer ID is only be used for allocating a timer when booting without device-tree. Once device-tree migration is complete, all the timer ID references will be removed. 2. System timer resources (memory and interrupts) are directly obtained from the device-tree timer node when booting with device-tree, so that system timers are no longer reliant upon the OMAP HWMOD framework to provide these resources. 3. If DT blob is present, then let device-tree create the timer devices dynamically. 4. When device-tree is present the "id" field in the platform_device structure (pdev->id) is initialised to -1 and hence cannot be used to identify a timer instance. Due to this the following changes were made ... a). The API omap_dm_timer_request_specific() is not supported when using device-tree, because it uses the device ID to request a specific timer. This function will return an error if called when device-tree is present. Users of this API should use omap_dm_timer_request_by_cap() instead. b). When removing the DMTIMER driver, the timer "id" was used to identify the timer instance. The remove function has been modified to use the device name instead of the "id". 5. When device-tree is present the platform_data structure will be NULL and so check for this. 6. The OMAP timer device tree binding has the following optional parameters ... a). ti,timer-alwon --> Timer is in an always-on power domain b). ti,timer-dsp --> Timer can generate an interrupt to the on-chip DSP c). ti,timer-pwm --> Timer can generate a PWM output d). ti,timer-secure --> Timer is reserved on a secure OMAP device Search for the above parameters and set the appropriate timer attribute flags. Signed-off-by: Jon Hunter <jon-hunter@ti.com>
2012-05-14 09:41:37 -06:00
timer->io_base = of_iomap(np, 0);
ARM: OMAP: Add DT support for timer driver In order to add device-tree support to the timer driver the following changes were made ... 1. Allocate system timers (used for clock-events and clock-source) based upon timer properties rather than using an hard-coded timer instance ID. To allow this a new helper function called omap_dmtimer_find_by_property() has been added for finding a timer with the particular properties in the device-tree blob. Please note that this is an internal helper function for system timers only to find a timer in the device-tree blob. This cannot be used by device drivers, another API has been added for that (see below). Timers that are allocated for system timers are dynamically disabled at boot time by adding a status property with the value "disabled" to the timer's device-tree node. Please note that when allocating system timers we now pass a timer ID and timer property. The timer ID is only be used for allocating a timer when booting without device-tree. Once device-tree migration is complete, all the timer ID references will be removed. 2. System timer resources (memory and interrupts) are directly obtained from the device-tree timer node when booting with device-tree, so that system timers are no longer reliant upon the OMAP HWMOD framework to provide these resources. 3. If DT blob is present, then let device-tree create the timer devices dynamically. 4. When device-tree is present the "id" field in the platform_device structure (pdev->id) is initialised to -1 and hence cannot be used to identify a timer instance. Due to this the following changes were made ... a). The API omap_dm_timer_request_specific() is not supported when using device-tree, because it uses the device ID to request a specific timer. This function will return an error if called when device-tree is present. Users of this API should use omap_dm_timer_request_by_cap() instead. b). When removing the DMTIMER driver, the timer "id" was used to identify the timer instance. The remove function has been modified to use the device name instead of the "id". 5. When device-tree is present the platform_data structure will be NULL and so check for this. 6. The OMAP timer device tree binding has the following optional parameters ... a). ti,timer-alwon --> Timer is in an always-on power domain b). ti,timer-dsp --> Timer can generate an interrupt to the on-chip DSP c). ti,timer-pwm --> Timer can generate a PWM output d). ti,timer-secure --> Timer is reserved on a secure OMAP device Search for the above parameters and set the appropriate timer attribute flags. Signed-off-by: Jon Hunter <jon-hunter@ti.com>
2012-05-14 09:41:37 -06:00
timer->fclk = of_clk_get_by_name(np, "fck");
ARM: OMAP: Add DT support for timer driver In order to add device-tree support to the timer driver the following changes were made ... 1. Allocate system timers (used for clock-events and clock-source) based upon timer properties rather than using an hard-coded timer instance ID. To allow this a new helper function called omap_dmtimer_find_by_property() has been added for finding a timer with the particular properties in the device-tree blob. Please note that this is an internal helper function for system timers only to find a timer in the device-tree blob. This cannot be used by device drivers, another API has been added for that (see below). Timers that are allocated for system timers are dynamically disabled at boot time by adding a status property with the value "disabled" to the timer's device-tree node. Please note that when allocating system timers we now pass a timer ID and timer property. The timer ID is only be used for allocating a timer when booting without device-tree. Once device-tree migration is complete, all the timer ID references will be removed. 2. System timer resources (memory and interrupts) are directly obtained from the device-tree timer node when booting with device-tree, so that system timers are no longer reliant upon the OMAP HWMOD framework to provide these resources. 3. If DT blob is present, then let device-tree create the timer devices dynamically. 4. When device-tree is present the "id" field in the platform_device structure (pdev->id) is initialised to -1 and hence cannot be used to identify a timer instance. Due to this the following changes were made ... a). The API omap_dm_timer_request_specific() is not supported when using device-tree, because it uses the device ID to request a specific timer. This function will return an error if called when device-tree is present. Users of this API should use omap_dm_timer_request_by_cap() instead. b). When removing the DMTIMER driver, the timer "id" was used to identify the timer instance. The remove function has been modified to use the device name instead of the "id". 5. When device-tree is present the platform_data structure will be NULL and so check for this. 6. The OMAP timer device tree binding has the following optional parameters ... a). ti,timer-alwon --> Timer is in an always-on power domain b). ti,timer-dsp --> Timer can generate an interrupt to the on-chip DSP c). ti,timer-pwm --> Timer can generate a PWM output d). ti,timer-secure --> Timer is reserved on a secure OMAP device Search for the above parameters and set the appropriate timer attribute flags. Signed-off-by: Jon Hunter <jon-hunter@ti.com>
2012-05-14 09:41:37 -06:00
of_node_put(np);
ARM: OMAP: Add DT support for timer driver In order to add device-tree support to the timer driver the following changes were made ... 1. Allocate system timers (used for clock-events and clock-source) based upon timer properties rather than using an hard-coded timer instance ID. To allow this a new helper function called omap_dmtimer_find_by_property() has been added for finding a timer with the particular properties in the device-tree blob. Please note that this is an internal helper function for system timers only to find a timer in the device-tree blob. This cannot be used by device drivers, another API has been added for that (see below). Timers that are allocated for system timers are dynamically disabled at boot time by adding a status property with the value "disabled" to the timer's device-tree node. Please note that when allocating system timers we now pass a timer ID and timer property. The timer ID is only be used for allocating a timer when booting without device-tree. Once device-tree migration is complete, all the timer ID references will be removed. 2. System timer resources (memory and interrupts) are directly obtained from the device-tree timer node when booting with device-tree, so that system timers are no longer reliant upon the OMAP HWMOD framework to provide these resources. 3. If DT blob is present, then let device-tree create the timer devices dynamically. 4. When device-tree is present the "id" field in the platform_device structure (pdev->id) is initialised to -1 and hence cannot be used to identify a timer instance. Due to this the following changes were made ... a). The API omap_dm_timer_request_specific() is not supported when using device-tree, because it uses the device ID to request a specific timer. This function will return an error if called when device-tree is present. Users of this API should use omap_dm_timer_request_by_cap() instead. b). When removing the DMTIMER driver, the timer "id" was used to identify the timer instance. The remove function has been modified to use the device name instead of the "id". 5. When device-tree is present the platform_data structure will be NULL and so check for this. 6. The OMAP timer device tree binding has the following optional parameters ... a). ti,timer-alwon --> Timer is in an always-on power domain b). ti,timer-dsp --> Timer can generate an interrupt to the on-chip DSP c). ti,timer-pwm --> Timer can generate a PWM output d). ti,timer-secure --> Timer is reserved on a secure OMAP device Search for the above parameters and set the appropriate timer attribute flags. Signed-off-by: Jon Hunter <jon-hunter@ti.com>
2012-05-14 09:41:37 -06:00
oh = omap_hwmod_lookup(oh_name);
if (!oh)
return -ENODEV;
*timer_name = oh->name;
if (!timer->io_base)
return -ENXIO;
omap_hwmod_setup_one(oh_name);
/* After the dmtimer is using hwmod these clocks won't be needed */
if (IS_ERR_OR_NULL(timer->fclk))
timer->fclk = clk_get(NULL, omap_hwmod_get_main_clk(oh));
if (IS_ERR(timer->fclk))
return PTR_ERR(timer->fclk);
src = clk_get(NULL, fck_source);
if (IS_ERR(src))
return PTR_ERR(src);
WARN(clk_set_parent(timer->fclk, src) < 0,
"Cannot set timer parent clock, no PLL clock driver?");
ARM: OMAP: Remove __omap_dm_timer_set_source function The __omap_dm_timer_set_source() function is only used by the system timer (clock-events and clock-source) code for OMAP2+ devices. Therefore, we can remove this code from the dmtimer driver and move it to the system timer code for OMAP2+ devices. The current __omap_dm_timer_set_source() function calls clk_disable() before calling clk_set_parent() and clk_enable() afterwards. We can avoid these calls to clk_disable/enable by moving the calls to omap_hwmod_setup_one() and omap_hwmod_enable() to after the call to clk_set_parent() in omap_dm_timer_init_one(). The function omap_hwmod_setup_one() will enable the timers functional clock and therefore increment the use-count of the functional clock to 1. clk_set_parent() will fail if the use-count is not 0 when called. Hence, if omap_hwmod_setup_one() is called before clk_set_parent(), we will need to call clk_disable() before calling clk_set_parent() to decrement the use-count. Hence, avoid these extra calls to disable and enable the functional clock by moving the calls to omap_hwmod_setup_one() and omap_hwmod_enable() to after clk_set_parent(). We can also remove the delay from the __omap_dm_timer_set_source() function because enabling the clock will now be handled via the HWMOD framework by calling omap_hwmod_setup_one(). Therefore, by moving the calls to omap_hwmod_setup_one() and omap_hwmod_enable() to after the call to clk_set_parent(), we can simply replace __omap_dm_timer_set_source() with clk_set_parent(). It should be safe to move these hwmod calls to later in the omap_dm_timer_init_one() because other calls to the hwmod layer that occur before are just requesting resource information. Testing includes boot testing on OMAP2420 H4, OMAP3430 SDP and OMAP4430 Blaze with the following configurations: 1. CONFIG_OMAP_32K_TIMER=y 2. CONFIG_OMAP_32K_TIMER=y and boot parameter "clocksource=gp_timer" 3. CONFIG_OMAP_32K_TIMER not set 4. CONFIG_OMAP_32K_TIMER not set and boot parameter "clocksource=gp_timer" Signed-off-by: Jon Hunter <jon-hunter@ti.com> Acked-by: Santosh Shilimkar <santosh.shilimkar@ti.com>
2012-09-28 10:43:30 -06:00
clk_put(src);
ARM: OMAP: Remove __omap_dm_timer_set_source function The __omap_dm_timer_set_source() function is only used by the system timer (clock-events and clock-source) code for OMAP2+ devices. Therefore, we can remove this code from the dmtimer driver and move it to the system timer code for OMAP2+ devices. The current __omap_dm_timer_set_source() function calls clk_disable() before calling clk_set_parent() and clk_enable() afterwards. We can avoid these calls to clk_disable/enable by moving the calls to omap_hwmod_setup_one() and omap_hwmod_enable() to after the call to clk_set_parent() in omap_dm_timer_init_one(). The function omap_hwmod_setup_one() will enable the timers functional clock and therefore increment the use-count of the functional clock to 1. clk_set_parent() will fail if the use-count is not 0 when called. Hence, if omap_hwmod_setup_one() is called before clk_set_parent(), we will need to call clk_disable() before calling clk_set_parent() to decrement the use-count. Hence, avoid these extra calls to disable and enable the functional clock by moving the calls to omap_hwmod_setup_one() and omap_hwmod_enable() to after clk_set_parent(). We can also remove the delay from the __omap_dm_timer_set_source() function because enabling the clock will now be handled via the HWMOD framework by calling omap_hwmod_setup_one(). Therefore, by moving the calls to omap_hwmod_setup_one() and omap_hwmod_enable() to after the call to clk_set_parent(), we can simply replace __omap_dm_timer_set_source() with clk_set_parent(). It should be safe to move these hwmod calls to later in the omap_dm_timer_init_one() because other calls to the hwmod layer that occur before are just requesting resource information. Testing includes boot testing on OMAP2420 H4, OMAP3430 SDP and OMAP4430 Blaze with the following configurations: 1. CONFIG_OMAP_32K_TIMER=y 2. CONFIG_OMAP_32K_TIMER=y and boot parameter "clocksource=gp_timer" 3. CONFIG_OMAP_32K_TIMER not set 4. CONFIG_OMAP_32K_TIMER not set and boot parameter "clocksource=gp_timer" Signed-off-by: Jon Hunter <jon-hunter@ti.com> Acked-by: Santosh Shilimkar <santosh.shilimkar@ti.com>
2012-09-28 10:43:30 -06:00
omap_hwmod_enable(oh);
__omap_dm_timer_init_regs(timer);
ARM: OMAP3+: Implement timer workaround for errata i103 and i767 Errata Titles: i103: Delay needed to read some GP timer, WD timer and sync timer registers after wakeup (OMAP3/4) i767: Delay needed to read some GP timer registers after wakeup (OMAP5) Description (i103/i767): If a General Purpose Timer (GPTimer) is in posted mode (TSICR [2].POSTED=1), due to internal resynchronizations, values read in TCRR, TCAR1 and TCAR2 registers right after the timer interface clock (L4) goes from stopped to active may not return the expected values. The most common event leading to this situation occurs upon wake up from idle. GPTimer non-posted synchronization mode is not impacted by this limitation. Workarounds: 1). Disable posted mode 2). Use static dependency between timer clock domain and MPUSS clock domain 3). Use no-idle mode when the timer is active Workarounds #2 and #3 are not pratical from a power standpoint and so workaround #1 has been implemented. Disabling posted mode adds some CPU overhead for configuring and reading the timers as the CPU has to wait for accesses to be re-synchronised within the timer. However, disabling posted mode guarantees correct operation. Please note that it is safe to use posted mode for timers if the counter (TCRR) and capture (TCARx) registers will never be read. An example of this is the clock-event system timer. This is used by the kernel to schedule events however, the timers counter is never read and capture registers are not used. Given that the kernel configures this timer often yet never reads the counter register it is safe to enable posted mode in this case. Hence, for the timer used for kernel clock-events, posted mode is enabled by overriding the errata for devices that are impacted by this defect. For drivers using the timers that do not read the counter or capture registers and wish to use posted mode, can override the errata and enable posted mode by making the following function calls. __omap_dm_timer_override_errata(timer, OMAP_TIMER_ERRATA_I103_I767); __omap_dm_timer_enable_posted(timer); Both dmtimers and watchdogs are impacted by this defect this patch only implements the workaround for the dmtimer. Currently the watchdog driver does not read the counter register and so no workaround is necessary. Posted mode will be disabled for all OMAP2+ devices (including AM33xx) using a GP timer as a clock-source timer to guarantee correct operation. This is not necessary for OMAP24xx devices but the default clock-source timer for OMAP24xx devices is the 32k-sync timer and not the GP timer and so should not have any impact. This should be re-visited for future devices if this errata is fixed. Confirmed with Vaibhav Hiremath that this bug also impacts AM33xx devices. Signed-off-by: Jon Hunter <jon-hunter@ti.com> Acked-by: Santosh Shilimkar <santosh.shilimkar@ti.com>
2012-09-27 11:47:43 -06:00
if (posted)
__omap_dm_timer_enable_posted(timer);
/* Check that the intended posted configuration matches the actual */
if (posted != timer->posted)
return -EINVAL;
ARM: OMAP3+: Implement timer workaround for errata i103 and i767 Errata Titles: i103: Delay needed to read some GP timer, WD timer and sync timer registers after wakeup (OMAP3/4) i767: Delay needed to read some GP timer registers after wakeup (OMAP5) Description (i103/i767): If a General Purpose Timer (GPTimer) is in posted mode (TSICR [2].POSTED=1), due to internal resynchronizations, values read in TCRR, TCAR1 and TCAR2 registers right after the timer interface clock (L4) goes from stopped to active may not return the expected values. The most common event leading to this situation occurs upon wake up from idle. GPTimer non-posted synchronization mode is not impacted by this limitation. Workarounds: 1). Disable posted mode 2). Use static dependency between timer clock domain and MPUSS clock domain 3). Use no-idle mode when the timer is active Workarounds #2 and #3 are not pratical from a power standpoint and so workaround #1 has been implemented. Disabling posted mode adds some CPU overhead for configuring and reading the timers as the CPU has to wait for accesses to be re-synchronised within the timer. However, disabling posted mode guarantees correct operation. Please note that it is safe to use posted mode for timers if the counter (TCRR) and capture (TCARx) registers will never be read. An example of this is the clock-event system timer. This is used by the kernel to schedule events however, the timers counter is never read and capture registers are not used. Given that the kernel configures this timer often yet never reads the counter register it is safe to enable posted mode in this case. Hence, for the timer used for kernel clock-events, posted mode is enabled by overriding the errata for devices that are impacted by this defect. For drivers using the timers that do not read the counter or capture registers and wish to use posted mode, can override the errata and enable posted mode by making the following function calls. __omap_dm_timer_override_errata(timer, OMAP_TIMER_ERRATA_I103_I767); __omap_dm_timer_enable_posted(timer); Both dmtimers and watchdogs are impacted by this defect this patch only implements the workaround for the dmtimer. Currently the watchdog driver does not read the counter register and so no workaround is necessary. Posted mode will be disabled for all OMAP2+ devices (including AM33xx) using a GP timer as a clock-source timer to guarantee correct operation. This is not necessary for OMAP24xx devices but the default clock-source timer for OMAP24xx devices is the 32k-sync timer and not the GP timer and so should not have any impact. This should be re-visited for future devices if this errata is fixed. Confirmed with Vaibhav Hiremath that this bug also impacts AM33xx devices. Signed-off-by: Jon Hunter <jon-hunter@ti.com> Acked-by: Santosh Shilimkar <santosh.shilimkar@ti.com>
2012-09-27 11:47:43 -06:00
timer->rate = clk_get_rate(timer->fclk);
timer->reserved = 1;
return r;
}
#if !defined(CONFIG_SMP) && defined(CONFIG_GENERIC_CLOCKEVENTS_BROADCAST)
void tick_broadcast(const struct cpumask *mask)
{
}
#endif
static void __init omap2_gp_clockevent_init(int gptimer_id,
ARM: OMAP: Add DT support for timer driver In order to add device-tree support to the timer driver the following changes were made ... 1. Allocate system timers (used for clock-events and clock-source) based upon timer properties rather than using an hard-coded timer instance ID. To allow this a new helper function called omap_dmtimer_find_by_property() has been added for finding a timer with the particular properties in the device-tree blob. Please note that this is an internal helper function for system timers only to find a timer in the device-tree blob. This cannot be used by device drivers, another API has been added for that (see below). Timers that are allocated for system timers are dynamically disabled at boot time by adding a status property with the value "disabled" to the timer's device-tree node. Please note that when allocating system timers we now pass a timer ID and timer property. The timer ID is only be used for allocating a timer when booting without device-tree. Once device-tree migration is complete, all the timer ID references will be removed. 2. System timer resources (memory and interrupts) are directly obtained from the device-tree timer node when booting with device-tree, so that system timers are no longer reliant upon the OMAP HWMOD framework to provide these resources. 3. If DT blob is present, then let device-tree create the timer devices dynamically. 4. When device-tree is present the "id" field in the platform_device structure (pdev->id) is initialised to -1 and hence cannot be used to identify a timer instance. Due to this the following changes were made ... a). The API omap_dm_timer_request_specific() is not supported when using device-tree, because it uses the device ID to request a specific timer. This function will return an error if called when device-tree is present. Users of this API should use omap_dm_timer_request_by_cap() instead. b). When removing the DMTIMER driver, the timer "id" was used to identify the timer instance. The remove function has been modified to use the device name instead of the "id". 5. When device-tree is present the platform_data structure will be NULL and so check for this. 6. The OMAP timer device tree binding has the following optional parameters ... a). ti,timer-alwon --> Timer is in an always-on power domain b). ti,timer-dsp --> Timer can generate an interrupt to the on-chip DSP c). ti,timer-pwm --> Timer can generate a PWM output d). ti,timer-secure --> Timer is reserved on a secure OMAP device Search for the above parameters and set the appropriate timer attribute flags. Signed-off-by: Jon Hunter <jon-hunter@ti.com>
2012-05-14 09:41:37 -06:00
const char *fck_source,
const char *property)
{
int res;
clkev.id = gptimer_id;
ARM: OMAP3+: Implement timer workaround for errata i103 and i767 Errata Titles: i103: Delay needed to read some GP timer, WD timer and sync timer registers after wakeup (OMAP3/4) i767: Delay needed to read some GP timer registers after wakeup (OMAP5) Description (i103/i767): If a General Purpose Timer (GPTimer) is in posted mode (TSICR [2].POSTED=1), due to internal resynchronizations, values read in TCRR, TCAR1 and TCAR2 registers right after the timer interface clock (L4) goes from stopped to active may not return the expected values. The most common event leading to this situation occurs upon wake up from idle. GPTimer non-posted synchronization mode is not impacted by this limitation. Workarounds: 1). Disable posted mode 2). Use static dependency between timer clock domain and MPUSS clock domain 3). Use no-idle mode when the timer is active Workarounds #2 and #3 are not pratical from a power standpoint and so workaround #1 has been implemented. Disabling posted mode adds some CPU overhead for configuring and reading the timers as the CPU has to wait for accesses to be re-synchronised within the timer. However, disabling posted mode guarantees correct operation. Please note that it is safe to use posted mode for timers if the counter (TCRR) and capture (TCARx) registers will never be read. An example of this is the clock-event system timer. This is used by the kernel to schedule events however, the timers counter is never read and capture registers are not used. Given that the kernel configures this timer often yet never reads the counter register it is safe to enable posted mode in this case. Hence, for the timer used for kernel clock-events, posted mode is enabled by overriding the errata for devices that are impacted by this defect. For drivers using the timers that do not read the counter or capture registers and wish to use posted mode, can override the errata and enable posted mode by making the following function calls. __omap_dm_timer_override_errata(timer, OMAP_TIMER_ERRATA_I103_I767); __omap_dm_timer_enable_posted(timer); Both dmtimers and watchdogs are impacted by this defect this patch only implements the workaround for the dmtimer. Currently the watchdog driver does not read the counter register and so no workaround is necessary. Posted mode will be disabled for all OMAP2+ devices (including AM33xx) using a GP timer as a clock-source timer to guarantee correct operation. This is not necessary for OMAP24xx devices but the default clock-source timer for OMAP24xx devices is the 32k-sync timer and not the GP timer and so should not have any impact. This should be re-visited for future devices if this errata is fixed. Confirmed with Vaibhav Hiremath that this bug also impacts AM33xx devices. Signed-off-by: Jon Hunter <jon-hunter@ti.com> Acked-by: Santosh Shilimkar <santosh.shilimkar@ti.com>
2012-09-27 11:47:43 -06:00
clkev.errata = omap_dm_timer_get_errata();
/*
* For clock-event timers we never read the timer counter and
* so we are not impacted by errata i103 and i767. Therefore,
* we can safely ignore this errata for clock-event timers.
*/
__omap_dm_timer_override_errata(&clkev, OMAP_TIMER_ERRATA_I103_I767);
res = omap_dm_timer_init_one(&clkev, fck_source, property,
&clockevent_gpt.name, OMAP_TIMER_POSTED);
BUG_ON(res);
ARM: OMAP: clean up some smatch warnings, fix some printk(KERN_ERR ... Resolve the following warnings from smatch: arch/arm/mach-omap2/gpmc.c:282 gpmc_cs_set_timings() info: why not propagate 'div' from gpmc_cs_calc_divider() instead of -1? arch/arm/mach-omap2/serial.c:328 omap_serial_init_port() error: 'pdev' dereferencing possible ERR_PTR() arch/arm/mach-omap2/timer.c:213 omap2_gp_clockevent_init() Error invalid range 4096 to -1 arch/arm/mach-omap2/gpio.c:63 omap2_gpio_dev_init() warn: possible memory leak of 'pdata' arch/arm/mach-omap2/omap_hwmod.c:1478 _assert_hardreset() warn: assigning -22 to unsigned variable 'ret' arch/arm/mach-omap2/omap_hwmod.c:1487 _assert_hardreset() warn: 4294963201 is more than 255 (max '(ret)' can be) so this is always the same. arch/arm/mach-omap2/omap_hwmod.c:1545 _read_hardreset() warn: assigning -22 to unsigned variable 'ret' arch/arm/mach-omap2/omap_hwmod.c:1554 _read_hardreset() warn: 4294963201 is more than 255 (max '(ret)' can be) so this is always the same. arch/arm/mach-omap2/dpll3xxx.c:629 omap3_clkoutx2_recalc() error: we previously assumed 'pclk' could be null (see line 627) arch/arm/mach-omap2/board-n8x0.c:422 n8x0_mmc_late_init() Error invalid range 14 to 13 arch/arm/mach-omap1/leds-h2p2-debug.c:71 h2p2_dbg_leds_event() error: potentially derefencing uninitialized 'fpga'. arch/arm/plat-omap/mux.c:79 omap_cfg_reg() Error invalid range 4096 to -1 Thanks to Tony Lindgren <tony@atomide.com> for pointing out that BUG() can be disabled. The changes in the first version that removed the subsequent return() after BUG() states have been dropped. Signed-off-by: Paul Walmsley <paul@pwsan.com> Cc: Tony Lindgren <tony@atomide.com>
2012-08-03 09:21:10 -06:00
omap2_gp_timer_irq.dev_id = &clkev;
setup_irq(clkev.irq, &omap2_gp_timer_irq);
__omap_dm_timer_int_enable(&clkev, OMAP_TIMER_INT_OVERFLOW);
clockevent_gpt.cpumask = cpu_possible_mask;
clockevent_gpt.irq = omap_dm_timer_get_irq(&clkev);
clockevents_config_and_register(&clockevent_gpt, clkev.rate,
3, /* Timer internal resynch latency */
0xffffffff);
if (soc_is_am33xx() || soc_is_am43xx()) {
clockevent_gpt.suspend = omap_clkevt_idle;
clockevent_gpt.resume = omap_clkevt_unidle;
clockevent_gpt_hwmod =
omap_hwmod_lookup(clockevent_gpt.name);
}
pr_info("OMAP clockevent source: %s at %lu Hz\n", clockevent_gpt.name,
clkev.rate);
}
/* Clocksource code */
static struct omap_dm_timer clksrc;
static bool use_gptimer_clksrc __initdata;
/*
* clocksource
*/
static u64 clocksource_read_cycles(struct clocksource *cs)
{
return (u64)__omap_dm_timer_read_counter(&clksrc,
ARM: OMAP3+: Implement timer workaround for errata i103 and i767 Errata Titles: i103: Delay needed to read some GP timer, WD timer and sync timer registers after wakeup (OMAP3/4) i767: Delay needed to read some GP timer registers after wakeup (OMAP5) Description (i103/i767): If a General Purpose Timer (GPTimer) is in posted mode (TSICR [2].POSTED=1), due to internal resynchronizations, values read in TCRR, TCAR1 and TCAR2 registers right after the timer interface clock (L4) goes from stopped to active may not return the expected values. The most common event leading to this situation occurs upon wake up from idle. GPTimer non-posted synchronization mode is not impacted by this limitation. Workarounds: 1). Disable posted mode 2). Use static dependency between timer clock domain and MPUSS clock domain 3). Use no-idle mode when the timer is active Workarounds #2 and #3 are not pratical from a power standpoint and so workaround #1 has been implemented. Disabling posted mode adds some CPU overhead for configuring and reading the timers as the CPU has to wait for accesses to be re-synchronised within the timer. However, disabling posted mode guarantees correct operation. Please note that it is safe to use posted mode for timers if the counter (TCRR) and capture (TCARx) registers will never be read. An example of this is the clock-event system timer. This is used by the kernel to schedule events however, the timers counter is never read and capture registers are not used. Given that the kernel configures this timer often yet never reads the counter register it is safe to enable posted mode in this case. Hence, for the timer used for kernel clock-events, posted mode is enabled by overriding the errata for devices that are impacted by this defect. For drivers using the timers that do not read the counter or capture registers and wish to use posted mode, can override the errata and enable posted mode by making the following function calls. __omap_dm_timer_override_errata(timer, OMAP_TIMER_ERRATA_I103_I767); __omap_dm_timer_enable_posted(timer); Both dmtimers and watchdogs are impacted by this defect this patch only implements the workaround for the dmtimer. Currently the watchdog driver does not read the counter register and so no workaround is necessary. Posted mode will be disabled for all OMAP2+ devices (including AM33xx) using a GP timer as a clock-source timer to guarantee correct operation. This is not necessary for OMAP24xx devices but the default clock-source timer for OMAP24xx devices is the 32k-sync timer and not the GP timer and so should not have any impact. This should be re-visited for future devices if this errata is fixed. Confirmed with Vaibhav Hiremath that this bug also impacts AM33xx devices. Signed-off-by: Jon Hunter <jon-hunter@ti.com> Acked-by: Santosh Shilimkar <santosh.shilimkar@ti.com>
2012-09-27 11:47:43 -06:00
OMAP_TIMER_NONPOSTED);
}
static struct clocksource clocksource_gpt = {
.rating = 300,
.read = clocksource_read_cycles,
.mask = CLOCKSOURCE_MASK(32),
.flags = CLOCK_SOURCE_IS_CONTINUOUS,
};
static u64 notrace dmtimer_read_sched_clock(void)
{
if (clksrc.reserved)
return __omap_dm_timer_read_counter(&clksrc,
ARM: OMAP3+: Implement timer workaround for errata i103 and i767 Errata Titles: i103: Delay needed to read some GP timer, WD timer and sync timer registers after wakeup (OMAP3/4) i767: Delay needed to read some GP timer registers after wakeup (OMAP5) Description (i103/i767): If a General Purpose Timer (GPTimer) is in posted mode (TSICR [2].POSTED=1), due to internal resynchronizations, values read in TCRR, TCAR1 and TCAR2 registers right after the timer interface clock (L4) goes from stopped to active may not return the expected values. The most common event leading to this situation occurs upon wake up from idle. GPTimer non-posted synchronization mode is not impacted by this limitation. Workarounds: 1). Disable posted mode 2). Use static dependency between timer clock domain and MPUSS clock domain 3). Use no-idle mode when the timer is active Workarounds #2 and #3 are not pratical from a power standpoint and so workaround #1 has been implemented. Disabling posted mode adds some CPU overhead for configuring and reading the timers as the CPU has to wait for accesses to be re-synchronised within the timer. However, disabling posted mode guarantees correct operation. Please note that it is safe to use posted mode for timers if the counter (TCRR) and capture (TCARx) registers will never be read. An example of this is the clock-event system timer. This is used by the kernel to schedule events however, the timers counter is never read and capture registers are not used. Given that the kernel configures this timer often yet never reads the counter register it is safe to enable posted mode in this case. Hence, for the timer used for kernel clock-events, posted mode is enabled by overriding the errata for devices that are impacted by this defect. For drivers using the timers that do not read the counter or capture registers and wish to use posted mode, can override the errata and enable posted mode by making the following function calls. __omap_dm_timer_override_errata(timer, OMAP_TIMER_ERRATA_I103_I767); __omap_dm_timer_enable_posted(timer); Both dmtimers and watchdogs are impacted by this defect this patch only implements the workaround for the dmtimer. Currently the watchdog driver does not read the counter register and so no workaround is necessary. Posted mode will be disabled for all OMAP2+ devices (including AM33xx) using a GP timer as a clock-source timer to guarantee correct operation. This is not necessary for OMAP24xx devices but the default clock-source timer for OMAP24xx devices is the 32k-sync timer and not the GP timer and so should not have any impact. This should be re-visited for future devices if this errata is fixed. Confirmed with Vaibhav Hiremath that this bug also impacts AM33xx devices. Signed-off-by: Jon Hunter <jon-hunter@ti.com> Acked-by: Santosh Shilimkar <santosh.shilimkar@ti.com>
2012-09-27 11:47:43 -06:00
OMAP_TIMER_NONPOSTED);
ARM: 7205/2: sched_clock: allow sched_clock to be selected at runtime sched_clock() is yet another blocker on the road to the single image. This patch implements an idea by Russell King: http://www.spinics.net/lists/linux-omap/msg49561.html Instead of asking the platform to implement both sched_clock() itself and the rollover callback, simply register a read() function, and let the ARM code care about sched_clock() itself, the conversion to ns and the rollover. sched_clock() uses this read() function as an indirection to the platform code. If the platform doesn't provide a read(), the code falls back to the jiffy counter (just like the default sched_clock). This allow some simplifications and possibly some footprint gain when multiple platforms are compiled in. Among the drawbacks, the removal of the *_fixed_sched_clock optimization which could negatively impact some platforms (sa1100, tegra, versatile and omap). Tested on 11MPCore, OMAP4 and Tegra. Cc: Imre Kaloz <kaloz@openwrt.org> Cc: Eric Miao <eric.y.miao@gmail.com> Cc: Colin Cross <ccross@android.com> Cc: Erik Gilling <konkers@android.com> Cc: Olof Johansson <olof@lixom.net> Cc: Sascha Hauer <kernel@pengutronix.de> Cc: Alessandro Rubini <rubini@unipv.it> Cc: STEricsson <STEricsson_nomadik_linux@list.st.com> Cc: Lennert Buytenhek <kernel@wantstofly.org> Cc: Ben Dooks <ben-linux@fluff.org> Tested-by: Jamie Iles <jamie@jamieiles.com> Tested-by: Tony Lindgren <tony@atomide.com> Tested-by: Kyungmin Park <kyungmin.park@samsung.com> Acked-by: Linus Walleij <linus.walleij@linaro.org> Acked-by: Nicolas Pitre <nico@linaro.org> Acked-by: Krzysztof Halasa <khc@pm.waw.pl> Acked-by: Kukjin Kim <kgene.kim@samsung.com> Signed-off-by: Marc Zyngier <marc.zyngier@arm.com> Signed-off-by: Russell King <rmk+kernel@arm.linux.org.uk>
2011-12-15 04:19:23 -07:00
return 0;
}
static const struct of_device_id omap_counter_match[] __initconst = {
{ .compatible = "ti,omap-counter32k", },
{ }
};
/* Setup free-running counter for clocksource */
static int __init __maybe_unused omap2_sync32k_clocksource_init(void)
ARM: OMAP: Make OMAP clocksource source selection using kernel param Current OMAP code supports couple of clocksource options based on compilation flag (CONFIG_OMAP_32K_TIMER). The 32KHz sync-timer and a gptimer which can run on 32KHz or system clock (e.g 38.4 MHz). So there can be 3 options - 1. 32KHz sync-timer 2. Sys_clock based (e.g 13/19.2/26/38.4 MHz) gptimer 3. 32KHz based gptimer. The optional gptimer based clocksource was added so that it can give the high precision than sync-timer, so expected usage was 2 and not 3. Unfortunately option 2, clocksource doesn't meet the requirement of free-running clock as per clocksource need. It stops in low power states when sys_clock is cut. That makes gptimer based clocksource option useless for OMAP2/3/4 devices with sys_clock as a clock input. So, in order to use option 2, deeper idle state MUST be disabled. Option 3 will still work but it is no better than 32K sync-timer based clocksource. We must support both sync timer and gptimer based clocksource as some OMAP based derivative SoCs like AM33XX does not have the sync timer. Considering above, make sync-timer and gptimer clocksource runtime selectable so that both OMAP and AMXXXX continue to use the same code. And, in order to precisely configure/setup sched_clock for given clocksource, decision has to be made early enough in boot sequence. So, the solution is, Use standard kernel parameter ("clocksource=") to override default 32k_sync-timer, in addition to this, we also use hwmod database lookup mechanism, through which at run-time we can identify availability of 32k-sync timer on the device, else fall back to gptimer. Also, moved low-level SoC specific init code to respective files, (mach-omap1/timer32k.c and mach-omap2/timer.c) Signed-off-by: Vaibhav Hiremath <hvaibhav@ti.com> Signed-off-by: Felipe Balbi <balbi@ti.com> Reviewed-by: Santosh Shilimkar <santosh.shilimkar@ti.com> Acked-by: Kevin Hilman <khilman@ti.com> Tested-by: Kevin Hilman <khilman@ti.com> Cc: Benoit Cousson <b-cousson@ti.com> Cc: Paul Walmsley <paul@pwsan.com> Cc: Tarun Kanti DebBarma <tarun.kanti@ti.com> Cc: Ming Lei <tom.leiming@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Tony Lindgren <tony@atomide.com>
2012-05-09 11:07:05 -06:00
{
int ret;
struct device_node *np = NULL;
ARM: OMAP: Make OMAP clocksource source selection using kernel param Current OMAP code supports couple of clocksource options based on compilation flag (CONFIG_OMAP_32K_TIMER). The 32KHz sync-timer and a gptimer which can run on 32KHz or system clock (e.g 38.4 MHz). So there can be 3 options - 1. 32KHz sync-timer 2. Sys_clock based (e.g 13/19.2/26/38.4 MHz) gptimer 3. 32KHz based gptimer. The optional gptimer based clocksource was added so that it can give the high precision than sync-timer, so expected usage was 2 and not 3. Unfortunately option 2, clocksource doesn't meet the requirement of free-running clock as per clocksource need. It stops in low power states when sys_clock is cut. That makes gptimer based clocksource option useless for OMAP2/3/4 devices with sys_clock as a clock input. So, in order to use option 2, deeper idle state MUST be disabled. Option 3 will still work but it is no better than 32K sync-timer based clocksource. We must support both sync timer and gptimer based clocksource as some OMAP based derivative SoCs like AM33XX does not have the sync timer. Considering above, make sync-timer and gptimer clocksource runtime selectable so that both OMAP and AMXXXX continue to use the same code. And, in order to precisely configure/setup sched_clock for given clocksource, decision has to be made early enough in boot sequence. So, the solution is, Use standard kernel parameter ("clocksource=") to override default 32k_sync-timer, in addition to this, we also use hwmod database lookup mechanism, through which at run-time we can identify availability of 32k-sync timer on the device, else fall back to gptimer. Also, moved low-level SoC specific init code to respective files, (mach-omap1/timer32k.c and mach-omap2/timer.c) Signed-off-by: Vaibhav Hiremath <hvaibhav@ti.com> Signed-off-by: Felipe Balbi <balbi@ti.com> Reviewed-by: Santosh Shilimkar <santosh.shilimkar@ti.com> Acked-by: Kevin Hilman <khilman@ti.com> Tested-by: Kevin Hilman <khilman@ti.com> Cc: Benoit Cousson <b-cousson@ti.com> Cc: Paul Walmsley <paul@pwsan.com> Cc: Tarun Kanti DebBarma <tarun.kanti@ti.com> Cc: Ming Lei <tom.leiming@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Tony Lindgren <tony@atomide.com>
2012-05-09 11:07:05 -06:00
struct omap_hwmod *oh;
const char *oh_name = "counter_32k";
/*
* See if the 32kHz counter is supported.
*/
np = omap_get_timer_dt(omap_counter_match, NULL);
if (!np)
return -ENODEV;
of_property_read_string_index(np, "ti,hwmods", 0, &oh_name);
if (!oh_name)
return -ENODEV;
ARM: OMAP: Make OMAP clocksource source selection using kernel param Current OMAP code supports couple of clocksource options based on compilation flag (CONFIG_OMAP_32K_TIMER). The 32KHz sync-timer and a gptimer which can run on 32KHz or system clock (e.g 38.4 MHz). So there can be 3 options - 1. 32KHz sync-timer 2. Sys_clock based (e.g 13/19.2/26/38.4 MHz) gptimer 3. 32KHz based gptimer. The optional gptimer based clocksource was added so that it can give the high precision than sync-timer, so expected usage was 2 and not 3. Unfortunately option 2, clocksource doesn't meet the requirement of free-running clock as per clocksource need. It stops in low power states when sys_clock is cut. That makes gptimer based clocksource option useless for OMAP2/3/4 devices with sys_clock as a clock input. So, in order to use option 2, deeper idle state MUST be disabled. Option 3 will still work but it is no better than 32K sync-timer based clocksource. We must support both sync timer and gptimer based clocksource as some OMAP based derivative SoCs like AM33XX does not have the sync timer. Considering above, make sync-timer and gptimer clocksource runtime selectable so that both OMAP and AMXXXX continue to use the same code. And, in order to precisely configure/setup sched_clock for given clocksource, decision has to be made early enough in boot sequence. So, the solution is, Use standard kernel parameter ("clocksource=") to override default 32k_sync-timer, in addition to this, we also use hwmod database lookup mechanism, through which at run-time we can identify availability of 32k-sync timer on the device, else fall back to gptimer. Also, moved low-level SoC specific init code to respective files, (mach-omap1/timer32k.c and mach-omap2/timer.c) Signed-off-by: Vaibhav Hiremath <hvaibhav@ti.com> Signed-off-by: Felipe Balbi <balbi@ti.com> Reviewed-by: Santosh Shilimkar <santosh.shilimkar@ti.com> Acked-by: Kevin Hilman <khilman@ti.com> Tested-by: Kevin Hilman <khilman@ti.com> Cc: Benoit Cousson <b-cousson@ti.com> Cc: Paul Walmsley <paul@pwsan.com> Cc: Tarun Kanti DebBarma <tarun.kanti@ti.com> Cc: Ming Lei <tom.leiming@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Tony Lindgren <tony@atomide.com>
2012-05-09 11:07:05 -06:00
/*
* First check hwmod data is available for sync32k counter
*/
oh = omap_hwmod_lookup(oh_name);
if (!oh || oh->slaves_cnt == 0)
return -ENODEV;
omap_hwmod_setup_one(oh_name);
ret = omap_hwmod_enable(oh);
if (ret) {
pr_warn("%s: failed to enable counter_32k module (%d)\n",
__func__, ret);
return ret;
}
return ret;
}
static void __init omap2_gptimer_clocksource_init(int gptimer_id,
ARM: OMAP3: Update clocksource timer selection When booting with device-tree for OMAP3 and AM335x devices and a gptimer is used as the clocksource (which is always the case for AM335x), a gptimer located in a power domain that is not always-on is selected. Ideally we should use a gptimer for clocksource that is located in a power domain that is always on (such as the wake-up domain) so that time can be maintained during a kernel suspend without keeping on additional power domains unnecessarily. In order to fix this so that we can select a gptimer located in a power domain that is always-on, the following changes were made ... 1. Currently, only when selecting a gptimer to use for a clockevent timer, do we pass a timer property that can be used to select a specific gptimer. Change this so that we can pass a property when selecting a gptimer to use for a clocksource timer too. 2. Currently, when selecting either a gptimer to use for a clockevent timer or a clocksource timer and no timer property is passed, then the first available timer is selected regardless of the properties it has. Change this so that if no properties are passed, then a timer that does not have additional features (such as always-on, dsp-irq, pwm, and secure) is selected. For OMAP3 and AM335x devices that use a gptimer for clocksource, change the selection of the gptimer so that by default the gptimer located in the always-on power domain is used for clocksource instead of clockevents. Please note that using a gptimer for both clocksource and clockevents can have a system power impact during idle. The reason being is that OMAP and AMxxx devices typically only have one gptimer in a power domain that is always-on. Therefore when the kernel is idle both the clocksource and clockevent timers will be active and this will keep additional power domains on. During kernel suspend, only the clocksource timer is active and therefore, it is better to use a gptimer in a power domain that is always-on for clocksource. Signed-off-by: Jon Hunter <jon-hunter@ti.com> Acked-by: Santosh Shilimkar <santosh.shilimkar@ti.com> Acked-by: Igor Grinberg <grinberg@compulab.co.il>
2013-01-28 16:53:57 -07:00
const char *fck_source,
const char *property)
{
int res;
clksrc.id = gptimer_id;
ARM: OMAP3+: Implement timer workaround for errata i103 and i767 Errata Titles: i103: Delay needed to read some GP timer, WD timer and sync timer registers after wakeup (OMAP3/4) i767: Delay needed to read some GP timer registers after wakeup (OMAP5) Description (i103/i767): If a General Purpose Timer (GPTimer) is in posted mode (TSICR [2].POSTED=1), due to internal resynchronizations, values read in TCRR, TCAR1 and TCAR2 registers right after the timer interface clock (L4) goes from stopped to active may not return the expected values. The most common event leading to this situation occurs upon wake up from idle. GPTimer non-posted synchronization mode is not impacted by this limitation. Workarounds: 1). Disable posted mode 2). Use static dependency between timer clock domain and MPUSS clock domain 3). Use no-idle mode when the timer is active Workarounds #2 and #3 are not pratical from a power standpoint and so workaround #1 has been implemented. Disabling posted mode adds some CPU overhead for configuring and reading the timers as the CPU has to wait for accesses to be re-synchronised within the timer. However, disabling posted mode guarantees correct operation. Please note that it is safe to use posted mode for timers if the counter (TCRR) and capture (TCARx) registers will never be read. An example of this is the clock-event system timer. This is used by the kernel to schedule events however, the timers counter is never read and capture registers are not used. Given that the kernel configures this timer often yet never reads the counter register it is safe to enable posted mode in this case. Hence, for the timer used for kernel clock-events, posted mode is enabled by overriding the errata for devices that are impacted by this defect. For drivers using the timers that do not read the counter or capture registers and wish to use posted mode, can override the errata and enable posted mode by making the following function calls. __omap_dm_timer_override_errata(timer, OMAP_TIMER_ERRATA_I103_I767); __omap_dm_timer_enable_posted(timer); Both dmtimers and watchdogs are impacted by this defect this patch only implements the workaround for the dmtimer. Currently the watchdog driver does not read the counter register and so no workaround is necessary. Posted mode will be disabled for all OMAP2+ devices (including AM33xx) using a GP timer as a clock-source timer to guarantee correct operation. This is not necessary for OMAP24xx devices but the default clock-source timer for OMAP24xx devices is the 32k-sync timer and not the GP timer and so should not have any impact. This should be re-visited for future devices if this errata is fixed. Confirmed with Vaibhav Hiremath that this bug also impacts AM33xx devices. Signed-off-by: Jon Hunter <jon-hunter@ti.com> Acked-by: Santosh Shilimkar <santosh.shilimkar@ti.com>
2012-09-27 11:47:43 -06:00
clksrc.errata = omap_dm_timer_get_errata();
res = omap_dm_timer_init_one(&clksrc, fck_source, property,
&clocksource_gpt.name,
ARM: OMAP3+: Implement timer workaround for errata i103 and i767 Errata Titles: i103: Delay needed to read some GP timer, WD timer and sync timer registers after wakeup (OMAP3/4) i767: Delay needed to read some GP timer registers after wakeup (OMAP5) Description (i103/i767): If a General Purpose Timer (GPTimer) is in posted mode (TSICR [2].POSTED=1), due to internal resynchronizations, values read in TCRR, TCAR1 and TCAR2 registers right after the timer interface clock (L4) goes from stopped to active may not return the expected values. The most common event leading to this situation occurs upon wake up from idle. GPTimer non-posted synchronization mode is not impacted by this limitation. Workarounds: 1). Disable posted mode 2). Use static dependency between timer clock domain and MPUSS clock domain 3). Use no-idle mode when the timer is active Workarounds #2 and #3 are not pratical from a power standpoint and so workaround #1 has been implemented. Disabling posted mode adds some CPU overhead for configuring and reading the timers as the CPU has to wait for accesses to be re-synchronised within the timer. However, disabling posted mode guarantees correct operation. Please note that it is safe to use posted mode for timers if the counter (TCRR) and capture (TCARx) registers will never be read. An example of this is the clock-event system timer. This is used by the kernel to schedule events however, the timers counter is never read and capture registers are not used. Given that the kernel configures this timer often yet never reads the counter register it is safe to enable posted mode in this case. Hence, for the timer used for kernel clock-events, posted mode is enabled by overriding the errata for devices that are impacted by this defect. For drivers using the timers that do not read the counter or capture registers and wish to use posted mode, can override the errata and enable posted mode by making the following function calls. __omap_dm_timer_override_errata(timer, OMAP_TIMER_ERRATA_I103_I767); __omap_dm_timer_enable_posted(timer); Both dmtimers and watchdogs are impacted by this defect this patch only implements the workaround for the dmtimer. Currently the watchdog driver does not read the counter register and so no workaround is necessary. Posted mode will be disabled for all OMAP2+ devices (including AM33xx) using a GP timer as a clock-source timer to guarantee correct operation. This is not necessary for OMAP24xx devices but the default clock-source timer for OMAP24xx devices is the 32k-sync timer and not the GP timer and so should not have any impact. This should be re-visited for future devices if this errata is fixed. Confirmed with Vaibhav Hiremath that this bug also impacts AM33xx devices. Signed-off-by: Jon Hunter <jon-hunter@ti.com> Acked-by: Santosh Shilimkar <santosh.shilimkar@ti.com>
2012-09-27 11:47:43 -06:00
OMAP_TIMER_NONPOSTED);
BUG_ON(res);
__omap_dm_timer_load_start(&clksrc,
OMAP_TIMER_CTRL_ST | OMAP_TIMER_CTRL_AR, 0,
ARM: OMAP3+: Implement timer workaround for errata i103 and i767 Errata Titles: i103: Delay needed to read some GP timer, WD timer and sync timer registers after wakeup (OMAP3/4) i767: Delay needed to read some GP timer registers after wakeup (OMAP5) Description (i103/i767): If a General Purpose Timer (GPTimer) is in posted mode (TSICR [2].POSTED=1), due to internal resynchronizations, values read in TCRR, TCAR1 and TCAR2 registers right after the timer interface clock (L4) goes from stopped to active may not return the expected values. The most common event leading to this situation occurs upon wake up from idle. GPTimer non-posted synchronization mode is not impacted by this limitation. Workarounds: 1). Disable posted mode 2). Use static dependency between timer clock domain and MPUSS clock domain 3). Use no-idle mode when the timer is active Workarounds #2 and #3 are not pratical from a power standpoint and so workaround #1 has been implemented. Disabling posted mode adds some CPU overhead for configuring and reading the timers as the CPU has to wait for accesses to be re-synchronised within the timer. However, disabling posted mode guarantees correct operation. Please note that it is safe to use posted mode for timers if the counter (TCRR) and capture (TCARx) registers will never be read. An example of this is the clock-event system timer. This is used by the kernel to schedule events however, the timers counter is never read and capture registers are not used. Given that the kernel configures this timer often yet never reads the counter register it is safe to enable posted mode in this case. Hence, for the timer used for kernel clock-events, posted mode is enabled by overriding the errata for devices that are impacted by this defect. For drivers using the timers that do not read the counter or capture registers and wish to use posted mode, can override the errata and enable posted mode by making the following function calls. __omap_dm_timer_override_errata(timer, OMAP_TIMER_ERRATA_I103_I767); __omap_dm_timer_enable_posted(timer); Both dmtimers and watchdogs are impacted by this defect this patch only implements the workaround for the dmtimer. Currently the watchdog driver does not read the counter register and so no workaround is necessary. Posted mode will be disabled for all OMAP2+ devices (including AM33xx) using a GP timer as a clock-source timer to guarantee correct operation. This is not necessary for OMAP24xx devices but the default clock-source timer for OMAP24xx devices is the 32k-sync timer and not the GP timer and so should not have any impact. This should be re-visited for future devices if this errata is fixed. Confirmed with Vaibhav Hiremath that this bug also impacts AM33xx devices. Signed-off-by: Jon Hunter <jon-hunter@ti.com> Acked-by: Santosh Shilimkar <santosh.shilimkar@ti.com>
2012-09-27 11:47:43 -06:00
OMAP_TIMER_NONPOSTED);
sched_clock_register(dmtimer_read_sched_clock, 32, clksrc.rate);
if (clocksource_register_hz(&clocksource_gpt, clksrc.rate))
pr_err("Could not register clocksource %s\n",
clocksource_gpt.name);
ARM: OMAP: Make OMAP clocksource source selection using kernel param Current OMAP code supports couple of clocksource options based on compilation flag (CONFIG_OMAP_32K_TIMER). The 32KHz sync-timer and a gptimer which can run on 32KHz or system clock (e.g 38.4 MHz). So there can be 3 options - 1. 32KHz sync-timer 2. Sys_clock based (e.g 13/19.2/26/38.4 MHz) gptimer 3. 32KHz based gptimer. The optional gptimer based clocksource was added so that it can give the high precision than sync-timer, so expected usage was 2 and not 3. Unfortunately option 2, clocksource doesn't meet the requirement of free-running clock as per clocksource need. It stops in low power states when sys_clock is cut. That makes gptimer based clocksource option useless for OMAP2/3/4 devices with sys_clock as a clock input. So, in order to use option 2, deeper idle state MUST be disabled. Option 3 will still work but it is no better than 32K sync-timer based clocksource. We must support both sync timer and gptimer based clocksource as some OMAP based derivative SoCs like AM33XX does not have the sync timer. Considering above, make sync-timer and gptimer clocksource runtime selectable so that both OMAP and AMXXXX continue to use the same code. And, in order to precisely configure/setup sched_clock for given clocksource, decision has to be made early enough in boot sequence. So, the solution is, Use standard kernel parameter ("clocksource=") to override default 32k_sync-timer, in addition to this, we also use hwmod database lookup mechanism, through which at run-time we can identify availability of 32k-sync timer on the device, else fall back to gptimer. Also, moved low-level SoC specific init code to respective files, (mach-omap1/timer32k.c and mach-omap2/timer.c) Signed-off-by: Vaibhav Hiremath <hvaibhav@ti.com> Signed-off-by: Felipe Balbi <balbi@ti.com> Reviewed-by: Santosh Shilimkar <santosh.shilimkar@ti.com> Acked-by: Kevin Hilman <khilman@ti.com> Tested-by: Kevin Hilman <khilman@ti.com> Cc: Benoit Cousson <b-cousson@ti.com> Cc: Paul Walmsley <paul@pwsan.com> Cc: Tarun Kanti DebBarma <tarun.kanti@ti.com> Cc: Ming Lei <tom.leiming@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Tony Lindgren <tony@atomide.com>
2012-05-09 11:07:05 -06:00
else
pr_info("OMAP clocksource: %s at %lu Hz\n",
clocksource_gpt.name, clksrc.rate);
ARM: OMAP: Make OMAP clocksource source selection using kernel param Current OMAP code supports couple of clocksource options based on compilation flag (CONFIG_OMAP_32K_TIMER). The 32KHz sync-timer and a gptimer which can run on 32KHz or system clock (e.g 38.4 MHz). So there can be 3 options - 1. 32KHz sync-timer 2. Sys_clock based (e.g 13/19.2/26/38.4 MHz) gptimer 3. 32KHz based gptimer. The optional gptimer based clocksource was added so that it can give the high precision than sync-timer, so expected usage was 2 and not 3. Unfortunately option 2, clocksource doesn't meet the requirement of free-running clock as per clocksource need. It stops in low power states when sys_clock is cut. That makes gptimer based clocksource option useless for OMAP2/3/4 devices with sys_clock as a clock input. So, in order to use option 2, deeper idle state MUST be disabled. Option 3 will still work but it is no better than 32K sync-timer based clocksource. We must support both sync timer and gptimer based clocksource as some OMAP based derivative SoCs like AM33XX does not have the sync timer. Considering above, make sync-timer and gptimer clocksource runtime selectable so that both OMAP and AMXXXX continue to use the same code. And, in order to precisely configure/setup sched_clock for given clocksource, decision has to be made early enough in boot sequence. So, the solution is, Use standard kernel parameter ("clocksource=") to override default 32k_sync-timer, in addition to this, we also use hwmod database lookup mechanism, through which at run-time we can identify availability of 32k-sync timer on the device, else fall back to gptimer. Also, moved low-level SoC specific init code to respective files, (mach-omap1/timer32k.c and mach-omap2/timer.c) Signed-off-by: Vaibhav Hiremath <hvaibhav@ti.com> Signed-off-by: Felipe Balbi <balbi@ti.com> Reviewed-by: Santosh Shilimkar <santosh.shilimkar@ti.com> Acked-by: Kevin Hilman <khilman@ti.com> Tested-by: Kevin Hilman <khilman@ti.com> Cc: Benoit Cousson <b-cousson@ti.com> Cc: Paul Walmsley <paul@pwsan.com> Cc: Tarun Kanti DebBarma <tarun.kanti@ti.com> Cc: Ming Lei <tom.leiming@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Tony Lindgren <tony@atomide.com>
2012-05-09 11:07:05 -06:00
}
static void __init __omap_sync32k_timer_init(int clkev_nr, const char *clkev_src,
const char *clkev_prop, int clksrc_nr, const char *clksrc_src,
const char *clksrc_prop, bool gptimer)
{
omap_clk_init();
omap_dmtimer_init();
omap2_gp_clockevent_init(clkev_nr, clkev_src, clkev_prop);
/* Enable the use of clocksource="gp_timer" kernel parameter */
if (use_gptimer_clksrc || gptimer)
omap2_gptimer_clocksource_init(clksrc_nr, clksrc_src,
clksrc_prop);
else
omap2_sync32k_clocksource_init();
}
void __init omap_init_time(void)
{
__omap_sync32k_timer_init(1, "timer_32k_ck", "ti,timer-alwon",
2, "timer_sys_ck", NULL, false);
timer_probe();
}
#if defined(CONFIG_ARCH_OMAP3) || defined(CONFIG_SOC_AM43XX)
void __init omap3_secure_sync32k_timer_init(void)
{
__omap_sync32k_timer_init(12, "secure_32k_fck", "ti,timer-secure",
2, "timer_sys_ck", NULL, false);
timer_probe();
}
#endif /* CONFIG_ARCH_OMAP3 */
#if defined(CONFIG_ARCH_OMAP3) || defined(CONFIG_SOC_AM33XX) || \
defined(CONFIG_SOC_AM43XX)
void __init omap3_gptimer_timer_init(void)
{
__omap_sync32k_timer_init(2, "timer_sys_ck", NULL,
1, "timer_sys_ck", "ti,timer-alwon", true);
if (of_have_populated_dt())
timer_probe();
}
#endif
#if defined(CONFIG_ARCH_OMAP4) || defined(CONFIG_SOC_OMAP5) || \
defined(CONFIG_SOC_DRA7XX)
static void __init omap4_sync32k_timer_init(void)
{
__omap_sync32k_timer_init(1, "timer_32k_ck", "ti,timer-alwon",
2, "sys_clkin_ck", NULL, false);
}
void __init omap4_local_timer_init(void)
{
omap4_sync32k_timer_init();
timer_probe();
}
#endif
#if defined(CONFIG_SOC_OMAP5) || defined(CONFIG_SOC_DRA7XX)
/*
* The realtime counter also called master counter, is a free-running
* counter, which is related to real time. It produces the count used
* by the CPU local timer peripherals in the MPU cluster. The timer counts
* at a rate of 6.144 MHz. Because the device operates on different clocks
* in different power modes, the master counter shifts operation between
* clocks, adjusting the increment per clock in hardware accordingly to
* maintain a constant count rate.
*/
static void __init realtime_counter_init(void)
{
#ifdef CONFIG_SOC_HAS_REALTIME_COUNTER
void __iomem *base;
static struct clk *sys_clk;
unsigned long rate;
unsigned int reg;
unsigned long long num, den;
base = ioremap(REALTIME_COUNTER_BASE, SZ_32);
if (!base) {
pr_err("%s: ioremap failed\n", __func__);
return;
}
sys_clk = clk_get(NULL, "sys_clkin");
if (IS_ERR(sys_clk)) {
pr_err("%s: failed to get system clock handle\n", __func__);
iounmap(base);
return;
}
rate = clk_get_rate(sys_clk);
if (soc_is_dra7xx()) {
/*
* Errata i856 says the 32.768KHz crystal does not start at
* power on, so the CPU falls back to an emulated 32KHz clock
* based on sysclk / 610 instead. This causes the master counter
* frequency to not be 6.144MHz but at sysclk / 610 * 375 / 2
* (OR sysclk * 75 / 244)
*
* This affects at least the DRA7/AM572x 1.0, 1.1 revisions.
* Of course any board built without a populated 32.768KHz
* crystal would also need this fix even if the CPU is fixed
* later.
*
* Either case can be detected by using the two speedselect bits
* If they are not 0, then the 32.768KHz clock driving the
* coarse counter that corrects the fine counter every time it
* ticks is actually rate/610 rather than 32.768KHz and we
* should compensate to avoid the 570ppm (at 20MHz, much worse
* at other rates) too fast system time.
*/
reg = omap_ctrl_readl(DRA7_CTRL_CORE_BOOTSTRAP);
if (reg & DRA7_SPEEDSELECT_MASK) {
num = 75;
den = 244;
goto sysclk1_based;
}
}
/* Numerator/denumerator values refer TRM Realtime Counter section */
switch (rate) {
case 12000000:
num = 64;
den = 125;
break;
case 13000000:
num = 768;
den = 1625;
break;
case 19200000:
num = 8;
den = 25;
break;
case 20000000:
num = 192;
den = 625;
break;
case 26000000:
num = 384;
den = 1625;
break;
case 27000000:
num = 256;
den = 1125;
break;
case 38400000:
default:
/* Program it for 38.4 MHz */
num = 4;
den = 25;
break;
}
sysclk1_based:
/* Program numerator and denumerator registers */
reg = readl_relaxed(base + INCREMENTER_NUMERATOR_OFFSET) &
NUMERATOR_DENUMERATOR_MASK;
reg |= num;
writel_relaxed(reg, base + INCREMENTER_NUMERATOR_OFFSET);
reg = readl_relaxed(base + INCREMENTER_DENUMERATOR_RELOAD_OFFSET) &
NUMERATOR_DENUMERATOR_MASK;
reg |= den;
writel_relaxed(reg, base + INCREMENTER_DENUMERATOR_RELOAD_OFFSET);
arch_timer_freq = DIV_ROUND_UP_ULL(rate * num, den);
set_cntfreq();
iounmap(base);
#endif
ARM: OMAP2+: timer: remove CONFIG_OMAP_32K_TIMER CONFIG_OMAP_32K_TIMER is kind of standing on the single zImage way. Make OMAP2+ timer code independant from the CONFIG_OMAP_32K_TIMER setting. To remove the dependancy, several conversions/additions had to be done: 1) Timer initialization functions are named by the platform name and the clock source in use. This also makes it possible to define and use the GPTIMER as the clock source instead of the 32K timer on platforms that do not have the 32K timer ip block or the 32K timer is not wired on the board. Currently, the the timer is chosen in the machine_desc structure on per board basis. Later, DT should be used to choose the timer. 2) Settings under the CONFIG_OMAP_32K_TIMER option are used as defaults and those under !CONFIG_OMAP_32K_TIMER are removed. This removes the CONFIG_OMAP_32K_TIMER on OMAP2+ timer code. 3) Since we have all the timers defined inside machine_desc structure and we no longer need the fallback to gp_timer clock source in case 32k_timer clock source is unavailable (namely on AM33xx), we no longer need the #ifdef around omap2_sync32k_clocksource_init() function. Remove the #ifdef CONFIG_OMAP_32K_TIMER around the omap2_sync32k_clocksource_init() function. Signed-off-by: Igor Grinberg <grinberg@compulab.co.il> Cc: Jon Hunter <jon-hunter@ti.com> Cc: Santosh Shilimkar <santosh.shilimkar@ti.com> Cc: Vaibhav Hiremath <hvaibhav@ti.com> Acked-by: Santosh Shilimkar <santosh.shilimkar@ti.com> Reviewed-by: Jon Hunter <jon-hunter@ti.com>
2012-11-20 00:17:15 -07:00
}
void __init omap5_realtime_timer_init(void)
{
omap4_sync32k_timer_init();
realtime_counter_init();
timer_probe();
}
#endif /* CONFIG_SOC_OMAP5 || CONFIG_SOC_DRA7XX */
ARM: OMAP: Make OMAP clocksource source selection using kernel param Current OMAP code supports couple of clocksource options based on compilation flag (CONFIG_OMAP_32K_TIMER). The 32KHz sync-timer and a gptimer which can run on 32KHz or system clock (e.g 38.4 MHz). So there can be 3 options - 1. 32KHz sync-timer 2. Sys_clock based (e.g 13/19.2/26/38.4 MHz) gptimer 3. 32KHz based gptimer. The optional gptimer based clocksource was added so that it can give the high precision than sync-timer, so expected usage was 2 and not 3. Unfortunately option 2, clocksource doesn't meet the requirement of free-running clock as per clocksource need. It stops in low power states when sys_clock is cut. That makes gptimer based clocksource option useless for OMAP2/3/4 devices with sys_clock as a clock input. So, in order to use option 2, deeper idle state MUST be disabled. Option 3 will still work but it is no better than 32K sync-timer based clocksource. We must support both sync timer and gptimer based clocksource as some OMAP based derivative SoCs like AM33XX does not have the sync timer. Considering above, make sync-timer and gptimer clocksource runtime selectable so that both OMAP and AMXXXX continue to use the same code. And, in order to precisely configure/setup sched_clock for given clocksource, decision has to be made early enough in boot sequence. So, the solution is, Use standard kernel parameter ("clocksource=") to override default 32k_sync-timer, in addition to this, we also use hwmod database lookup mechanism, through which at run-time we can identify availability of 32k-sync timer on the device, else fall back to gptimer. Also, moved low-level SoC specific init code to respective files, (mach-omap1/timer32k.c and mach-omap2/timer.c) Signed-off-by: Vaibhav Hiremath <hvaibhav@ti.com> Signed-off-by: Felipe Balbi <balbi@ti.com> Reviewed-by: Santosh Shilimkar <santosh.shilimkar@ti.com> Acked-by: Kevin Hilman <khilman@ti.com> Tested-by: Kevin Hilman <khilman@ti.com> Cc: Benoit Cousson <b-cousson@ti.com> Cc: Paul Walmsley <paul@pwsan.com> Cc: Tarun Kanti DebBarma <tarun.kanti@ti.com> Cc: Ming Lei <tom.leiming@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Tony Lindgren <tony@atomide.com>
2012-05-09 11:07:05 -06:00
/**
* omap2_override_clocksource - clocksource override with user configuration
*
* Allows user to override default clocksource, using kernel parameter
* clocksource="gp_timer" (For all OMAP2PLUS architectures)
*
* Note that, here we are using same standard kernel parameter "clocksource=",
* and not introducing any OMAP specific interface.
*/
static int __init omap2_override_clocksource(char *str)
{
if (!str)
return 0;
/*
* For OMAP architecture, we only have two options
* - sync_32k (default)
* - gp_timer (sys_clk based)
*/
if (!strcmp(str, "gp_timer"))
use_gptimer_clksrc = true;
return 0;
}
early_param("clocksource", omap2_override_clocksource);