[PATCH v1 00/30] Introduce core voltage scaling for NVIDIA Tegra20/30 SoCs

Thierry Reding thierry.reding at gmail.com
Fri Nov 13 16:35:52 UTC 2020


On Fri, Nov 13, 2020 at 01:14:45AM +0300, Dmitry Osipenko wrote:
> 12.11.2020 23:43, Thierry Reding пишет:
> >> The difference in comparison to using voltage regulator directly is
> >> minimal, basically the core-supply phandle is replaced is replaced with
> >> a power-domain phandle in a device tree.
> > These new power-domain handles would have to be added to devices that
> > potentially already have a power-domain handle, right? Isn't that going
> > to cause issues? I vaguely recall that we already have multiple power
> > domains for the XUSB controller and we have to jump through extra hoops
> > to make that work.
> 
> I modeled the core PD as a parent of the PMC sub-domains, which
> presumably is a correct way to represent the domains topology.
> 
> https://gist.github.com/digetx/dfd92c7f7e0aa6cef20403c4298088d7
> 
> >> The only thing which makes me feel a bit uncomfortable is that there is
> >> no real hardware node for the power domain node in a device-tree.
> > Could we anchor the new power domain at the PMC for example? That would
> > allow us to avoid the "virtual" node.
> 
> I had a thought about using PMC for the core domain, but not sure
> whether it will be an entirely correct hardware description. Although,
> it will be nice to have it this way.
> 
> This is what Tegra TRM says about PMC:
> 
> "The Power Management Controller (PMC) block interacts with an external
> or Power Manager Unit (PMU). The PMC mostly controls the entry and exit
> of the system from different sleep modes. It provides power-gating
> controllers for SOC and CPU power-islands and also provides scratch
> storage to save some of the context during sleep modes (when CPU and/or
> SOC power rails are off). Additionally, PMC interacts with the external
> Power Manager Unit (PMU)."
> 
> The core voltage regulator is a part of the PMU.
> 
> Not all core SoC devices are behind PMC, IIUC.

There are usually some SoC devices that are always-on. Things like the
RTC for example, can never be power-gated, as far as I recall. On newer
chips there are usually many more blocks that can't be powergated at
all.

> > On the other hand, if we were to
> > use a regulator, we'd be adding a node for that, right? So isn't this
> > effectively going to be the same node if we use a power domain? Both
> > software constructs are using the same voltage regulator, so they should
> > be able to be described by the same device tree node, shouldn't they?
> 
> I'm not exactly sure what you're meaning by "use a regulator" and "we'd
> be adding a node for that", could you please clarify? This v1 approach
> uses a core-supply phandle (i.e. regulator is used), it doesn't require
> extra nodes.

What I meant to say was that the actual supply voltage is generated by
some device (typically one of the SD outputs of the PMIC). Whether we
model this as a power domain or a regulator doesn't really matter,
right? So I'm wondering if the device that generates the voltage should
be the power domain provider, just like it is the provider of the
regulator if this was modelled as a regulator.

Thierry
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