prm_common.c 11 KB

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  1. /*
  2. * OMAP2+ common Power & Reset Management (PRM) IP block functions
  3. *
  4. * Copyright (C) 2011 Texas Instruments, Inc.
  5. * Tero Kristo <t-kristo@ti.com>
  6. *
  7. * This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
  8. * it under the terms of the GNU General Public License version 2 as
  9. * published by the Free Software Foundation.
  10. *
  11. *
  12. * For historical purposes, the API used to configure the PRM
  13. * interrupt handler refers to it as the "PRCM interrupt." The
  14. * underlying registers are located in the PRM on OMAP3/4.
  15. *
  16. * XXX This code should eventually be moved to a PRM driver.
  17. */
  18. #include <linux/kernel.h>
  19. #include <linux/module.h>
  20. #include <linux/init.h>
  21. #include <linux/io.h>
  22. #include <linux/irq.h>
  23. #include <linux/interrupt.h>
  24. #include <linux/slab.h>
  25. #include "../plat-omap/common.h"
  26. #include <plat/prcm.h>
  27. #include "prm2xxx_3xxx.h"
  28. #include "prm2xxx.h"
  29. #include "prm3xxx.h"
  30. #include "prm44xx.h"
  31. /*
  32. * OMAP_PRCM_MAX_NR_PENDING_REG: maximum number of PRM_IRQ*_MPU regs
  33. * XXX this is technically not needed, since
  34. * omap_prcm_register_chain_handler() could allocate this based on the
  35. * actual amount of memory needed for the SoC
  36. */
  37. #define OMAP_PRCM_MAX_NR_PENDING_REG 2
  38. /*
  39. * prcm_irq_chips: an array of all of the "generic IRQ chips" in use
  40. * by the PRCM interrupt handler code. There will be one 'chip' per
  41. * PRM_{IRQSTATUS,IRQENABLE}_MPU register pair. (So OMAP3 will have
  42. * one "chip" and OMAP4 will have two.)
  43. */
  44. static struct irq_chip_generic **prcm_irq_chips;
  45. /*
  46. * prcm_irq_setup: the PRCM IRQ parameters for the hardware the code
  47. * is currently running on. Defined and passed by initialization code
  48. * that calls omap_prcm_register_chain_handler().
  49. */
  50. static struct omap_prcm_irq_setup *prcm_irq_setup;
  51. /*
  52. * prm_ll_data: function pointers to SoC-specific implementations of
  53. * common PRM functions
  54. */
  55. static struct prm_ll_data null_prm_ll_data;
  56. static struct prm_ll_data *prm_ll_data = &null_prm_ll_data;
  57. /* Private functions */
  58. /*
  59. * Move priority events from events to priority_events array
  60. */
  61. static void omap_prcm_events_filter_priority(unsigned long *events,
  62. unsigned long *priority_events)
  63. {
  64. int i;
  65. for (i = 0; i < prcm_irq_setup->nr_regs; i++) {
  66. priority_events[i] =
  67. events[i] & prcm_irq_setup->priority_mask[i];
  68. events[i] ^= priority_events[i];
  69. }
  70. }
  71. /*
  72. * PRCM Interrupt Handler
  73. *
  74. * This is a common handler for the OMAP PRCM interrupts. Pending
  75. * interrupts are detected by a call to prcm_pending_events and
  76. * dispatched accordingly. Clearing of the wakeup events should be
  77. * done by the SoC specific individual handlers.
  78. */
  79. static void omap_prcm_irq_handler(unsigned int irq, struct irq_desc *desc)
  80. {
  81. unsigned long pending[OMAP_PRCM_MAX_NR_PENDING_REG];
  82. unsigned long priority_pending[OMAP_PRCM_MAX_NR_PENDING_REG];
  83. struct irq_chip *chip = irq_desc_get_chip(desc);
  84. unsigned int virtirq;
  85. int nr_irq = prcm_irq_setup->nr_regs * 32;
  86. /*
  87. * If we are suspended, mask all interrupts from PRCM level,
  88. * this does not ack them, and they will be pending until we
  89. * re-enable the interrupts, at which point the
  90. * omap_prcm_irq_handler will be executed again. The
  91. * _save_and_clear_irqen() function must ensure that the PRM
  92. * write to disable all IRQs has reached the PRM before
  93. * returning, or spurious PRCM interrupts may occur during
  94. * suspend.
  95. */
  96. if (prcm_irq_setup->suspended) {
  97. prcm_irq_setup->save_and_clear_irqen(prcm_irq_setup->saved_mask);
  98. prcm_irq_setup->suspend_save_flag = true;
  99. }
  100. /*
  101. * Loop until all pending irqs are handled, since
  102. * generic_handle_irq() can cause new irqs to come
  103. */
  104. while (!prcm_irq_setup->suspended) {
  105. prcm_irq_setup->read_pending_irqs(pending);
  106. /* No bit set, then all IRQs are handled */
  107. if (find_first_bit(pending, nr_irq) >= nr_irq)
  108. break;
  109. omap_prcm_events_filter_priority(pending, priority_pending);
  110. /*
  111. * Loop on all currently pending irqs so that new irqs
  112. * cannot starve previously pending irqs
  113. */
  114. /* Serve priority events first */
  115. for_each_set_bit(virtirq, priority_pending, nr_irq)
  116. generic_handle_irq(prcm_irq_setup->base_irq + virtirq);
  117. /* Serve normal events next */
  118. for_each_set_bit(virtirq, pending, nr_irq)
  119. generic_handle_irq(prcm_irq_setup->base_irq + virtirq);
  120. }
  121. if (chip->irq_ack)
  122. chip->irq_ack(&desc->irq_data);
  123. if (chip->irq_eoi)
  124. chip->irq_eoi(&desc->irq_data);
  125. chip->irq_unmask(&desc->irq_data);
  126. prcm_irq_setup->ocp_barrier(); /* avoid spurious IRQs */
  127. }
  128. /* Public functions */
  129. /**
  130. * omap_prcm_event_to_irq - given a PRCM event name, returns the
  131. * corresponding IRQ on which the handler should be registered
  132. * @name: name of the PRCM interrupt bit to look up - see struct omap_prcm_irq
  133. *
  134. * Returns the Linux internal IRQ ID corresponding to @name upon success,
  135. * or -ENOENT upon failure.
  136. */
  137. int omap_prcm_event_to_irq(const char *name)
  138. {
  139. int i;
  140. if (!prcm_irq_setup || !name)
  141. return -ENOENT;
  142. for (i = 0; i < prcm_irq_setup->nr_irqs; i++)
  143. if (!strcmp(prcm_irq_setup->irqs[i].name, name))
  144. return prcm_irq_setup->base_irq +
  145. prcm_irq_setup->irqs[i].offset;
  146. return -ENOENT;
  147. }
  148. /**
  149. * omap_prcm_irq_cleanup - reverses memory allocated and other steps
  150. * done by omap_prcm_register_chain_handler()
  151. *
  152. * No return value.
  153. */
  154. void omap_prcm_irq_cleanup(void)
  155. {
  156. int i;
  157. if (!prcm_irq_setup) {
  158. pr_err("PRCM: IRQ handler not initialized; cannot cleanup\n");
  159. return;
  160. }
  161. if (prcm_irq_chips) {
  162. for (i = 0; i < prcm_irq_setup->nr_regs; i++) {
  163. if (prcm_irq_chips[i])
  164. irq_remove_generic_chip(prcm_irq_chips[i],
  165. 0xffffffff, 0, 0);
  166. prcm_irq_chips[i] = NULL;
  167. }
  168. kfree(prcm_irq_chips);
  169. prcm_irq_chips = NULL;
  170. }
  171. kfree(prcm_irq_setup->saved_mask);
  172. prcm_irq_setup->saved_mask = NULL;
  173. kfree(prcm_irq_setup->priority_mask);
  174. prcm_irq_setup->priority_mask = NULL;
  175. irq_set_chained_handler(prcm_irq_setup->irq, NULL);
  176. if (prcm_irq_setup->base_irq > 0)
  177. irq_free_descs(prcm_irq_setup->base_irq,
  178. prcm_irq_setup->nr_regs * 32);
  179. prcm_irq_setup->base_irq = 0;
  180. }
  181. void omap_prcm_irq_prepare(void)
  182. {
  183. prcm_irq_setup->suspended = true;
  184. }
  185. void omap_prcm_irq_complete(void)
  186. {
  187. prcm_irq_setup->suspended = false;
  188. /* If we have not saved the masks, do not attempt to restore */
  189. if (!prcm_irq_setup->suspend_save_flag)
  190. return;
  191. prcm_irq_setup->suspend_save_flag = false;
  192. /*
  193. * Re-enable all masked PRCM irq sources, this causes the PRCM
  194. * interrupt to fire immediately if the events were masked
  195. * previously in the chain handler
  196. */
  197. prcm_irq_setup->restore_irqen(prcm_irq_setup->saved_mask);
  198. }
  199. /**
  200. * omap_prcm_register_chain_handler - initializes the prcm chained interrupt
  201. * handler based on provided parameters
  202. * @irq_setup: hardware data about the underlying PRM/PRCM
  203. *
  204. * Set up the PRCM chained interrupt handler on the PRCM IRQ. Sets up
  205. * one generic IRQ chip per PRM interrupt status/enable register pair.
  206. * Returns 0 upon success, -EINVAL if called twice or if invalid
  207. * arguments are passed, or -ENOMEM on any other error.
  208. */
  209. int omap_prcm_register_chain_handler(struct omap_prcm_irq_setup *irq_setup)
  210. {
  211. int nr_regs;
  212. u32 mask[OMAP_PRCM_MAX_NR_PENDING_REG];
  213. int offset, i;
  214. struct irq_chip_generic *gc;
  215. struct irq_chip_type *ct;
  216. if (!irq_setup)
  217. return -EINVAL;
  218. nr_regs = irq_setup->nr_regs;
  219. if (prcm_irq_setup) {
  220. pr_err("PRCM: already initialized; won't reinitialize\n");
  221. return -EINVAL;
  222. }
  223. if (nr_regs > OMAP_PRCM_MAX_NR_PENDING_REG) {
  224. pr_err("PRCM: nr_regs too large\n");
  225. return -EINVAL;
  226. }
  227. prcm_irq_setup = irq_setup;
  228. prcm_irq_chips = kzalloc(sizeof(void *) * nr_regs, GFP_KERNEL);
  229. prcm_irq_setup->saved_mask = kzalloc(sizeof(u32) * nr_regs, GFP_KERNEL);
  230. prcm_irq_setup->priority_mask = kzalloc(sizeof(u32) * nr_regs,
  231. GFP_KERNEL);
  232. if (!prcm_irq_chips || !prcm_irq_setup->saved_mask ||
  233. !prcm_irq_setup->priority_mask) {
  234. pr_err("PRCM: kzalloc failed\n");
  235. goto err;
  236. }
  237. memset(mask, 0, sizeof(mask));
  238. for (i = 0; i < irq_setup->nr_irqs; i++) {
  239. offset = irq_setup->irqs[i].offset;
  240. mask[offset >> 5] |= 1 << (offset & 0x1f);
  241. if (irq_setup->irqs[i].priority)
  242. irq_setup->priority_mask[offset >> 5] |=
  243. 1 << (offset & 0x1f);
  244. }
  245. irq_set_chained_handler(irq_setup->irq, omap_prcm_irq_handler);
  246. irq_setup->base_irq = irq_alloc_descs(-1, 0, irq_setup->nr_regs * 32,
  247. 0);
  248. if (irq_setup->base_irq < 0) {
  249. pr_err("PRCM: failed to allocate irq descs: %d\n",
  250. irq_setup->base_irq);
  251. goto err;
  252. }
  253. for (i = 0; i < irq_setup->nr_regs; i++) {
  254. gc = irq_alloc_generic_chip("PRCM", 1,
  255. irq_setup->base_irq + i * 32, prm_base,
  256. handle_level_irq);
  257. if (!gc) {
  258. pr_err("PRCM: failed to allocate generic chip\n");
  259. goto err;
  260. }
  261. ct = gc->chip_types;
  262. ct->chip.irq_ack = irq_gc_ack_set_bit;
  263. ct->chip.irq_mask = irq_gc_mask_clr_bit;
  264. ct->chip.irq_unmask = irq_gc_mask_set_bit;
  265. ct->regs.ack = irq_setup->ack + i * 4;
  266. ct->regs.mask = irq_setup->mask + i * 4;
  267. irq_setup_generic_chip(gc, mask[i], 0, IRQ_NOREQUEST, 0);
  268. prcm_irq_chips[i] = gc;
  269. }
  270. return 0;
  271. err:
  272. omap_prcm_irq_cleanup();
  273. return -ENOMEM;
  274. }
  275. /**
  276. * prm_read_reset_sources - return the sources of the SoC's last reset
  277. *
  278. * Return a u32 bitmask representing the reset sources that caused the
  279. * SoC to reset. The low-level per-SoC functions called by this
  280. * function remap the SoC-specific reset source bits into an
  281. * OMAP-common set of reset source bits, defined in
  282. * arch/arm/mach-omap2/prm.h. Returns the standardized reset source
  283. * u32 bitmask from the hardware upon success, or returns (1 <<
  284. * OMAP_UNKNOWN_RST_SRC_ID_SHIFT) if no low-level read_reset_sources()
  285. * function was registered.
  286. */
  287. u32 prm_read_reset_sources(void)
  288. {
  289. u32 ret = 1 << OMAP_UNKNOWN_RST_SRC_ID_SHIFT;
  290. if (prm_ll_data->read_reset_sources)
  291. ret = prm_ll_data->read_reset_sources();
  292. else
  293. WARN_ONCE(1, "prm: %s: no mapping function defined for reset sources\n", __func__);
  294. return ret;
  295. }
  296. /**
  297. * prm_register - register per-SoC low-level data with the PRM
  298. * @pld: low-level per-SoC OMAP PRM data & function pointers to register
  299. *
  300. * Register per-SoC low-level OMAP PRM data and function pointers with
  301. * the OMAP PRM common interface. The caller must keep the data
  302. * pointed to by @pld valid until it calls prm_unregister() and
  303. * it returns successfully. Returns 0 upon success, -EINVAL if @pld
  304. * is NULL, or -EEXIST if prm_register() has already been called
  305. * without an intervening prm_unregister().
  306. */
  307. int prm_register(struct prm_ll_data *pld)
  308. {
  309. if (!pld)
  310. return -EINVAL;
  311. if (prm_ll_data != &null_prm_ll_data)
  312. return -EEXIST;
  313. prm_ll_data = pld;
  314. return 0;
  315. }
  316. /**
  317. * prm_unregister - unregister per-SoC low-level data & function pointers
  318. * @pld: low-level per-SoC OMAP PRM data & function pointers to unregister
  319. *
  320. * Unregister per-SoC low-level OMAP PRM data and function pointers
  321. * that were previously registered with prm_register(). The
  322. * caller may not destroy any of the data pointed to by @pld until
  323. * this function returns successfully. Returns 0 upon success, or
  324. * -EINVAL if @pld is NULL or if @pld does not match the struct
  325. * prm_ll_data * previously registered by prm_register().
  326. */
  327. int prm_unregister(struct prm_ll_data *pld)
  328. {
  329. if (!pld || prm_ll_data != pld)
  330. return -EINVAL;
  331. prm_ll_data = &null_prm_ll_data;
  332. return 0;
  333. }