Commit 2e4690a0 authored by Lina Iyer's avatar Lina Iyer Committed by Andy Gross

dt-bindings: introduce RPMH RSC bindings for Qualcomm SoCs

Add device binding documentation for Qualcomm Technology Inc's RPMH RSC
driver. The driver is used for communicating resource state requests for
shared resources.

Cc: devicetree@vger.kernel.org
Signed-off-by: default avatarLina Iyer <ilina@codeaurora.org>
Reviewed-by: default avatarRob Herring <robh@kernel.org>
[rplsssn@codeaurora.org: minor order correction for TCS type]
Signed-off-by: default avatarRaju P.L.S.S.S.N <rplsssn@codeaurora.org>
Signed-off-by: default avatarAndy Gross <andy.gross@linaro.org>
parent 658628e7
RPMH RSC:
------------
Resource Power Manager Hardened (RPMH) is the mechanism for communicating with
the hardened resource accelerators on Qualcomm SoCs. Requests to the resources
can be written to the Trigger Command Set (TCS) registers and using a (addr,
val) pair and triggered. Messages in the TCS are then sent in sequence over an
internal bus.
The hardware block (Direct Resource Voter or DRV) is a part of the h/w entity
(Resource State Coordinator a.k.a RSC) that can handle multiple sleep and
active/wake resource requests. Multiple such DRVs can exist in a SoC and can
be written to from Linux. The structure of each DRV follows the same template
with a few variations that are captured by the properties here.
A TCS may be triggered from Linux or triggered by the F/W after all the CPUs
have powered off to facilitate idle power saving. TCS could be classified as -
ACTIVE /* Triggered by Linux */
SLEEP /* Triggered by F/W */
WAKE /* Triggered by F/W */
CONTROL /* Triggered by F/W */
The order in which they are described in the DT, should match the hardware
configuration.
Requests can be made for the state of a resource, when the subsystem is active
or idle. When all subsystems like Modem, GPU, CPU are idle, the resource state
will be an aggregate of the sleep votes from each of those subsystems. Clients
may request a sleep value for their shared resources in addition to the active
mode requests.
Properties:
- compatible:
Usage: required
Value type: <string>
Definition: Should be "qcom,rpmh-rsc".
- reg:
Usage: required
Value type: <prop-encoded-array>
Definition: The first register specifies the base address of the
DRV(s). The number of DRVs in the dependent on the RSC.
The tcs-offset specifies the start address of the
TCS in the DRVs.
- reg-names:
Usage: required
Value type: <string>
Definition: Maps the register specified in the reg property. Must be
"drv-0", "drv-1", "drv-2" etc and "tcs-offset". The
- interrupts:
Usage: required
Value type: <prop-encoded-interrupt>
Definition: The interrupt that trips when a message complete/response
is received for this DRV from the accelerators.
- qcom,drv-id:
Usage: required
Value type: <u32>
Definition: The id of the DRV in the RSC block that will be used by
this controller.
- qcom,tcs-config:
Usage: required
Value type: <prop-encoded-array>
Definition: The tuple defining the configuration of TCS.
Must have 2 cells which describe each TCS type.
<type number_of_tcs>.
The order of the TCS must match the hardware
configuration.
- Cell #1 (TCS Type): TCS types to be specified -
ACTIVE_TCS
SLEEP_TCS
WAKE_TCS
CONTROL_TCS
- Cell #2 (Number of TCS): <u32>
- label:
Usage: optional
Value type: <string>
Definition: Name for the RSC. The name would be used in trace logs.
Drivers that want to use the RSC to communicate with RPMH must specify their
bindings as child nodes of the RSC controllers they wish to communicate with.
Example 1:
For a TCS whose RSC base address is is 0x179C0000 and is at a DRV id of 2, the
register offsets for DRV2 start at 0D00, the register calculations are like
this -
DRV0: 0x179C0000
DRV2: 0x179C0000 + 0x10000 = 0x179D0000
DRV2: 0x179C0000 + 0x10000 * 2 = 0x179E0000
TCS-OFFSET: 0xD00
apps_rsc: rsc@179c0000 {
label = "apps_rsc";
compatible = "qcom,rpmh-rsc";
reg = <0x179c0000 0x10000>,
<0x179d0000 0x10000>,
<0x179e0000 0x10000>;
reg-names = "drv-0", "drv-1", "drv-2";
interrupts = <GIC_SPI 3 IRQ_TYPE_LEVEL_HIGH>,
<GIC_SPI 4 IRQ_TYPE_LEVEL_HIGH>,
<GIC_SPI 5 IRQ_TYPE_LEVEL_HIGH>;
qcom,tcs-offset = <0xd00>;
qcom,drv-id = <2>;
qcom,tcs-config = <ACTIVE_TCS 2>,
<SLEEP_TCS 3>,
<WAKE_TCS 3>,
<CONTROL_TCS 1>;
};
Example 2:
For a TCS whose RSC base address is 0xAF20000 and is at DRV id of 0, the
register offsets for DRV0 start at 01C00, the register calculations are like
this -
DRV0: 0xAF20000
TCS-OFFSET: 0x1C00
disp_rsc: rsc@af20000 {
label = "disp_rsc";
compatible = "qcom,rpmh-rsc";
reg = <0xaf20000 0x10000>;
reg-names = "drv-0";
interrupts = <GIC_SPI 129 IRQ_TYPE_LEVEL_HIGH>;
qcom,tcs-offset = <0x1c00>;
qcom,drv-id = <0>;
qcom,tcs-config = <ACTIVE_TCS 0>,
<SLEEP_TCS 1>,
<WAKE_TCS 1>,
<CONTROL_TCS 0>;
};
Markdown is supported
0%
or
You are about to add 0 people to the discussion. Proceed with caution.
Finish editing this message first!
Please register or to comment