Revision 750a7eee7395492960a7aeb3a3a1aa74158ec326 authored by Paul Mundt on 11 November 2011, 06:41:50 UTC, committed by Paul Mundt on 11 November 2011, 06:41:50 UTC
The runtime PM platform support stub in use by ARM-based SH/R-Mobile
platforms contains nothing that's specifically ARM-related and instead of
wholly generic to anything using the clock framework.

The recent runtime PM changes interact rather badly with the lazy
disabling of clocks late in the boot process through the clock framework,
leading to situations where the runtime suspend/resume paths are entered
without a clock being actively driven due to having been lazily gated
off.

In order to correct this we can trivially tie in the aforementioned stub
as a general fallback for all SH platforms that don't presently have
their own runtime PM implementations (the corner case being SH-based
SH-Mobile platforms, which have their own stub through the hwblk API --
which in turn has bitrotted and will be subsequently adapted to use the
same stub as everyone else), regardless of whether the platforms choose
to define power domains of their own or not.

This fixes up regressions for clock framework users who also build in
runtime PM support without any specific power domains of their own, which
was previously causing the serial console to be lost when warring with
lazy clock disabling.

Signed-off-by: Paul Mundt <lethal@linux-sh.org>
1 parent 5e442a4
Raw File
iomap_copy.c
/*
 * Copyright 2006 PathScale, Inc.  All Rights Reserved.
 *
 * This file is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
 * it under the terms of version 2 of the GNU General Public License
 * as published by the Free Software Foundation.
 *
 * This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
 * but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
 * MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.  See the
 * GNU General Public License for more details.
 *
 * You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
 * along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software Foundation,
 * Inc., 51 Franklin St, Fifth Floor, Boston, MA 02110-1301, USA.
 */

#include <linux/module.h>
#include <linux/io.h>

/**
 * __iowrite32_copy - copy data to MMIO space, in 32-bit units
 * @to: destination, in MMIO space (must be 32-bit aligned)
 * @from: source (must be 32-bit aligned)
 * @count: number of 32-bit quantities to copy
 *
 * Copy data from kernel space to MMIO space, in units of 32 bits at a
 * time.  Order of access is not guaranteed, nor is a memory barrier
 * performed afterwards.
 */
void __attribute__((weak)) __iowrite32_copy(void __iomem *to,
					    const void *from,
					    size_t count)
{
	u32 __iomem *dst = to;
	const u32 *src = from;
	const u32 *end = src + count;

	while (src < end)
		__raw_writel(*src++, dst++);
}
EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL(__iowrite32_copy);

/**
 * __iowrite64_copy - copy data to MMIO space, in 64-bit or 32-bit units
 * @to: destination, in MMIO space (must be 64-bit aligned)
 * @from: source (must be 64-bit aligned)
 * @count: number of 64-bit quantities to copy
 *
 * Copy data from kernel space to MMIO space, in units of 32 or 64 bits at a
 * time.  Order of access is not guaranteed, nor is a memory barrier
 * performed afterwards.
 */
void __attribute__((weak)) __iowrite64_copy(void __iomem *to,
					    const void *from,
					    size_t count)
{
#ifdef CONFIG_64BIT
	u64 __iomem *dst = to;
	const u64 *src = from;
	const u64 *end = src + count;

	while (src < end)
		__raw_writeq(*src++, dst++);
#else
	__iowrite32_copy(to, from, count * 2);
#endif
}

EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL(__iowrite64_copy);
back to top