Commit c80ac50c authored by Maxime Ripard's avatar Maxime Ripard Committed by Stephen Boyd

clk: Always set the rate on clk_set_range_rate

When we change a clock minimum or maximum using clk_set_rate_range(),
clk_set_min_rate() or clk_set_max_rate(), the current code will only
trigger a new rate change if the rate is outside of the new boundaries.

However, a clock driver might want to always keep the clock rate to
one of its boundary, for example the minimum to keep the power
consumption as low as possible.

Since they don't always get called though, clock providers don't have the
opportunity to implement this behaviour.

Let's trigger a clk_set_rate() on the previous requested rate every time
clk_set_rate_range() is called. That way, providers that care about the
new boundaries have a chance to adjust the rate, while providers that
don't care about those new boundaries will return the same rate than
before, which will be ignored by clk_set_rate() and won't result in a
new rate change.
Suggested-by: default avatarStephen Boyd <sboyd@kernel.org>
Signed-off-by: default avatarMaxime Ripard <maxime@cerno.tech>
Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/20220225143534.405820-7-maxime@cerno.techSigned-off-by: default avatarStephen Boyd <sboyd@kernel.org>
parent a9b26931
......@@ -2373,28 +2373,29 @@ int clk_set_rate_range(struct clk *clk, unsigned long min, unsigned long max)
goto out;
}
rate = clk_core_get_rate_nolock(clk->core);
if (rate < min || rate > max) {
/*
* FIXME:
* We are in bit of trouble here, current rate is outside the
* the requested range. We are going try to request appropriate
* range boundary but there is a catch. It may fail for the
* usual reason (clock broken, clock protected, etc) but also
* because:
* - round_rate() was not favorable and fell on the wrong
* side of the boundary
* - the determine_rate() callback does not really check for
* this corner case when determining the rate
*/
rate = clamp(clk->core->req_rate, min, max);
ret = clk_core_set_rate_nolock(clk->core, rate);
if (ret) {
/* rollback the changes */
clk->min_rate = old_min;
clk->max_rate = old_max;
}
/*
* Since the boundaries have been changed, let's give the
* opportunity to the provider to adjust the clock rate based on
* the new boundaries.
*
* We also need to handle the case where the clock is currently
* outside of the boundaries. Clamping the last requested rate
* to the current minimum and maximum will also handle this.
*
* FIXME:
* There is a catch. It may fail for the usual reason (clock
* broken, clock protected, etc) but also because:
* - round_rate() was not favorable and fell on the wrong
* side of the boundary
* - the determine_rate() callback does not really check for
* this corner case when determining the rate
*/
rate = clamp(clk->core->req_rate, min, max);
ret = clk_core_set_rate_nolock(clk->core, rate);
if (ret) {
/* rollback the changes */
clk->min_rate = old_min;
clk->max_rate = old_max;
}
out:
......
......@@ -549,13 +549,12 @@ static struct kunit_suite clk_range_test_suite = {
};
/*
* Test that if:
* - we have several subsequent calls to clk_set_rate_range();
* - and we have a round_rate ops that always return the maximum
* frequency allowed;
* Test that if we have several subsequent calls to
* clk_set_rate_range(), the core will reevaluate whether a new rate is
* needed each and every time.
*
* The clock will run at the minimum of all maximum boundaries
* requested, even if those boundaries aren't there anymore.
* With clk_dummy_maximize_rate_ops, this means that the rate will
* trail along the maximum as it evolves.
*/
static void clk_range_test_set_range_rate_maximized(struct kunit *test)
{
......@@ -596,18 +595,16 @@ static void clk_range_test_set_range_rate_maximized(struct kunit *test)
rate = clk_get_rate(clk);
KUNIT_ASSERT_GT(test, rate, 0);
KUNIT_EXPECT_EQ(test, rate, DUMMY_CLOCK_RATE_2 - 1000);
KUNIT_EXPECT_EQ(test, rate, DUMMY_CLOCK_RATE_2);
}
/*
* Test that if:
* - we have several subsequent calls to clk_set_rate_range(), across
* multiple users;
* - and we have a round_rate ops that always return the maximum
* frequency allowed;
* Test that if we have several subsequent calls to
* clk_set_rate_range(), across multiple users, the core will reevaluate
* whether a new rate is needed each and every time.
*
* The clock will run at the minimum of all maximum boundaries
* requested, even if those boundaries aren't there anymore.
* With clk_dummy_maximize_rate_ops, this means that the rate will
* trail along the maximum as it evolves.
*/
static void clk_range_test_multiple_set_range_rate_maximized(struct kunit *test)
{
......@@ -653,7 +650,7 @@ static void clk_range_test_multiple_set_range_rate_maximized(struct kunit *test)
rate = clk_get_rate(clk);
KUNIT_ASSERT_GT(test, rate, 0);
KUNIT_EXPECT_EQ(test, rate, DUMMY_CLOCK_RATE_1);
KUNIT_EXPECT_EQ(test, rate, DUMMY_CLOCK_RATE_2);
clk_put(user2);
clk_put(user1);
......@@ -673,13 +670,12 @@ static struct kunit_suite clk_range_maximize_test_suite = {
};
/*
* Test that if:
* - we have several subsequent calls to clk_set_rate_range()
* - and we have a round_rate ops that always return the minimum
* frequency allowed;
* Test that if we have several subsequent calls to
* clk_set_rate_range(), the core will reevaluate whether a new rate is
* needed each and every time.
*
* The clock will run at the maximum of all minimum boundaries
* requested, even if those boundaries aren't there anymore.
* With clk_dummy_minimize_rate_ops, this means that the rate will
* trail along the minimum as it evolves.
*/
static void clk_range_test_set_range_rate_minimized(struct kunit *test)
{
......@@ -720,18 +716,16 @@ static void clk_range_test_set_range_rate_minimized(struct kunit *test)
rate = clk_get_rate(clk);
KUNIT_ASSERT_GT(test, rate, 0);
KUNIT_EXPECT_EQ(test, rate, DUMMY_CLOCK_RATE_1 + 1000);
KUNIT_EXPECT_EQ(test, rate, DUMMY_CLOCK_RATE_1);
}
/*
* Test that if:
* - we have several subsequent calls to clk_set_rate_range(), across
* multiple users;
* - and we have a round_rate ops that always return the minimum
* frequency allowed;
* Test that if we have several subsequent calls to
* clk_set_rate_range(), across multiple users, the core will reevaluate
* whether a new rate is needed each and every time.
*
* The clock will run at the maximum of all minimum boundaries
* requested, even if those boundaries aren't there anymore.
* With clk_dummy_minimize_rate_ops, this means that the rate will
* trail along the minimum as it evolves.
*/
static void clk_range_test_multiple_set_range_rate_minimized(struct kunit *test)
{
......@@ -773,7 +767,7 @@ static void clk_range_test_multiple_set_range_rate_minimized(struct kunit *test)
rate = clk_get_rate(clk);
KUNIT_ASSERT_GT(test, rate, 0);
KUNIT_EXPECT_EQ(test, rate, DUMMY_CLOCK_RATE_2);
KUNIT_EXPECT_EQ(test, rate, DUMMY_CLOCK_RATE_1);
clk_put(user2);
clk_put(user1);
......
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