clk: tegra: defer application of init table

The Tegra clock driver is initialized during the ARM machine descriptor's
.init_irq() hook. It can't be initialized earlier, since dynamic memory
usage is required. It can't be initialized later, since the .init_timer()
hook needs the clocks initialized. However, at this time, udelay()
doesn't work.

The Tegra clock initialization table may enable some PLLs. Enabling a PLL
may require usage of udelay(). Hence, this can't happen right when the
clock driver is initialized.

To solve this, separate the clock driver initialization from the clock
table processing, so they can execute at separate times.

Signed-off-by: Stephen Warren <swarren@nvidia.com>
diff --git a/drivers/clk/tegra/clk-tegra20.c b/drivers/clk/tegra/clk-tegra20.c
index a7dc0a9..a15fb28 100644
--- a/drivers/clk/tegra/clk-tegra20.c
+++ b/drivers/clk/tegra/clk-tegra20.c
@@ -1252,6 +1252,11 @@
 	{clk_max, clk_max, 0, 0}, /* This MUST be the last entry */
 };
 
+static void __init tegra20_clock_apply_init_table(void)
+{
+	tegra_init_from_table(init_table, clks, clk_max);
+}
+
 /*
  * Some clocks may be used by different drivers depending on the board
  * configuration.  List those here to register them twice in the clock lookup
@@ -1318,7 +1323,7 @@
 	clk_data.clk_num = ARRAY_SIZE(clks);
 	of_clk_add_provider(np, of_clk_src_onecell_get, &clk_data);
 
-	tegra_init_from_table(init_table, clks, clk_max);
+	tegra_clk_apply_init_table = tegra20_clock_apply_init_table;
 
 	tegra_cpu_car_ops = &tegra20_cpu_car_ops;
 }