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authorDouglas Anderson <dianders@chromium.org>2017-02-14 13:01:14 -0800
committerHeiko Stuebner <heiko@sntech.de>2017-03-06 04:45:45 +0100
commit60aadea57ed98e734a7e9edb3076b5a72eff0b0d (patch)
treed230e2ac9c02ca0af8de685fd64ad08b1c97f151 /lib/zlib_inflate
parentc1ae3cfa0e89fa1a7ecc4c99031f5e9ae99d9201 (diff)
downloadlinux-60aadea57ed98e734a7e9edb3076b5a72eff0b0d.tar.bz2
clk: rockchip: Set "ignore unused" for PMU M0 clocks on rk3399
The PMU Cortex M0 on rk3399 is intended to be used for things like DDRFreq transitions, suspend/resume, and other things that are the purview of ARM Trusted Firmware and not the kernel. As such, the kernel shouldn't be messing with the clocks. Add CLK_IGNORE_UNUSED to these clocks. Without this change, the following was observed on a Chromebook with a rk3399 (using not-yet-upstream ARM Trusted Firmware code and not-yet-upstream kernel code based on kernel-4.4): 1. We init the clock framework. 2. We start up "DDRFreq", which causes ATF to occasionally fire up the M0 for transitions. Each time ATF fires up the M0 it will turn on these clocks and each time it is done it will turn them off. 3. We finally get to the the part of the kernel that calls clk_disable_unused() and we disables the clocks. You can see the race above. Basically everything is fine as long as ARM Trusted Firmware isn't starting up the M0 at exactly the same time that the kernel is disabling unused clocks. ...but if the race happens then we go boom. Signed-off-by: Douglas Anderson <dianders@chromium.org> Signed-off-by: Heiko Stuebner <heiko@sntech.de>
Diffstat (limited to 'lib/zlib_inflate')
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