From mboxrd@z Thu Jan 1 00:00:00 1970 From: b-cousson@ti.com (Cousson, Benoit) Date: Fri, 27 May 2011 17:00:10 +0200 Subject: [PATCHv2 2/2] OMAP: add omap_device_reset() In-Reply-To: <4DDFBA6E.4070005@ti.com> References: <1306481908-7386-1-git-send-email-tomi.valkeinen@ti.com> <1306481908-7386-3-git-send-email-tomi.valkeinen@ti.com> <4DDF9B5D.7060408@ti.com> <1306500367.1905.18.camel@deskari> <4DDFB8AF.1080800@ti.com> <4DDFBA6E.4070005@ti.com> Message-ID: <4DDFBC7A.6090501@ti.com> To: linux-arm-kernel@lists.infradead.org List-Id: linux-arm-kernel.lists.infradead.org On 5/27/2011 4:51 PM, Shilimkar, Santosh wrote: > On 5/27/2011 8:13 PM, Cousson, Benoit wrote: >> On 5/27/2011 2:46 PM, Valkeinen, Tomi wrote: >>> On Fri, 2011-05-27 at 14:38 +0200, Cousson, Benoit wrote: >>>> Hi Tomi, >>>> >>>> On 5/27/2011 9:38 AM, Valkeinen, Tomi wrote: >>>>> Add omap_device_reset() function which can be used to reset the hwmods >>>>> associated with the given platform device. >>>> >>>> We've never exposed it because we are trying to avoid that any driver >>>> play with asynchronous HW reset. That can lead to undefined HW >>>> behavior :-( >>>> >>>> Do you have some strong need for that? >>> >>> DSS driver has been designed so that it resets the HW before it begins >>> programming it. That way we get the HW into known state. Otherwise we >>> need to be extra careful to program all possible registers to a sane >>> value. Not impossible, of course, but requires extra work. >>> >>> I noticed the problem with DSI driver, it didn't work anymore if I >>> didn't reset it. >>> >>> Why does it lead to undefined HW behaviour? Isn't it much better to >>> reset the HW before starting to use it to be 100% sure it's in known and >>> valid state? >> >> In theory, but since your are resetting only the DSS IP, it can leads to >> side effect at SoC level. Especially wrt to clock management. >> >>> Especially in error situations it may be difficult (even impossible) to >>> recover without reset. DISPC has been known to froze in some sync lost >>> situations, and, if I recall right, if DSI transfer is aborted the only >>> way to recover is to reset the DSI block (on OMAP3). >> >> In case of recovery error it makes sense. What we did with hardreset is >> to re-assert the reset upon disable of the module and then the next >> enable will de-assert it. Softreset does not do that today. >> > I didn't notice this patch but Paul reported an issue on beagle > which was making L3 error handling driver hang. > > Later on after debugging we noticed, that DSS initiator > was throwing timeout error. > > As a temporary fix, we removed the timeout error from > the handler since root-cause was not known. [1] > > I am not sure but may be a proper DSS reset might fix > that issue as well. Yeah, but this is the issue... people will start abusing that to fix any kind of problems instead of finding the root cause. That should be use only to fix real HW issue that cannot be solve properly by SW. Regards, Benoit