[RFC PATCH 09/11] devfreq: exynos-bus: Add interconnect functionality to exynos-bus

Georgi Djakov georgi.djakov at linaro.org
Wed Aug 7 14:21:15 UTC 2019


Hi Artur,

On 8/1/19 10:59, Artur Świgoń wrote:
> Hi Georgi,
> 
> On Fri, 2019-07-26 at 11:05 +0300, Georgi Djakov wrote:
>> Hi Artur,
>>
>> On 7/23/19 15:20, Artur Świgoń wrote:
>>> This patch adds interconnect functionality to the exynos-bus devfreq
>>> driver.
>>>
>>> The SoC topology is a graph (or, more specifically, a tree) and most of its
>>> edges are taken from the devfreq parent-child hierarchy (cf.
>>> Documentation/devicetree/bindings/devfreq/exynos-bus.txt). The previous
>>> patch adds missing edges to the DT (under the name 'parent'). Due to
>>> unspecified relative probing order, -EPROBE_DEFER may be propagated to
>>> guarantee that a child is probed before its parent.
>>>
>>> Each bus is now an interconnect provider and an interconnect node as well
>>> (cf. Documentation/interconnect/interconnect.rst), i.e. every bus registers
>>> itself as a node. Node IDs are not hardcoded but rather assigned at
>>> runtime, in probing order (subject to the above-mentioned exception
>>> regarding relative order). This approach allows for using this driver with
>>> various Exynos SoCs.
>>
>> I am not familiar with the Exynos bus topology, but it seems to me that it's not
>> represented correctly. An interconnect provider with just a single node (port)
>> is odd. I would expect that each provider consists of multiple master and slave
>> nodes. This data would be used by a framework to understand what are the links
>> and how the traffic flows between the IP blocks and through which buses.
> 
> To summarize the exynos-bus topology[1] used by the devfreq driver: There are
> many data buses for data transfer in Samsung Exynos SoC. Every bus has its own
> clock. Buses often share power lines, in which case one of the buses on the
> power line is referred to as 'parent' (or as 'devfreq' in the DT). In the
> particular case of Exynos4412[1][2], the topology can be expressed as follows:
> 
> bus_dmc
> -- bus_acp
> -- bus_c2c
> 
> bus_leftbus
> -- bus_rightbus
> -- bus_display
> -- bus_fsys
> -- bus_peri
> -- bus_mfc
> 
> Where bus_dmc and bus_leftbus probably could be referred to as masters, and the
> following indented nodes as slaves. Patch 08/11 of this RFC additionally adds
> the following to the DT:
> 
> bus_dmc
> -- bus_leftbus
> 
> Which makes the topology a valid tree.
> 
> The exynos-bus concept in devfreq[3] is designed in such a way that every bus is
> probed separately as a platform device, and is a largely independent entity.
>
> This RFC proposes an extension to the existing devfreq driver that basically
> provides a simple QoS to ensure minimum clock frequency for selected buses
> (possibly overriding devfreq governor calculations) using the interconnect
> framework.
> 
> The hierarchy is modelled in such a way that every bus is an interconnect node.
> On the other hand, what is considered an interconnect provider here is quite
> arbitrary, but for the reasons mentioned in the above paragraph, this RFC
> assumes that every bus is a provider of itself as a node. Using an alternative

IIUC, in case we want to transfer data between the display and the memory
controller, the path would look like this:

display --> bus_display --> bus_leftbus --> bus_dmc --> memory

But the bus_display for example would have not one, but two nodes (ports),
right?  One representing the link to the display controller and another one
representing the link to bus_leftbus? So i think that all the buses should
have at least two nodes, to represent each end of the wire.

> singleton provider approach was deemed more complicated since the 'dev' field in
> 'struct icc_provider' has to be set to something meaningful and we are tied to
> the 'samsung,exynos-bus' compatible string in the driver (and multiple instances
> of exynos-bus probed in indeterminate relative order).
> 

Sure, the rest makes sense to me.

Thanks,
Georgi


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