| /* |
| * Copyright (C) 2013 Broadcom Corporation |
| * Copyright 2013 Linaro Limited |
| * |
| * This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or |
| * modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as |
| * published by the Free Software Foundation version 2. |
| * |
| * This program is distributed "as is" WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY of any |
| * kind, whether express or implied; without even the implied warranty |
| * of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the |
| * GNU General Public License for more details. |
| */ |
| |
| #ifndef _CLK_KONA_H |
| #define _CLK_KONA_H |
| |
| #include <linux/kernel.h> |
| #include <linux/list.h> |
| #include <linux/spinlock.h> |
| #include <linux/slab.h> |
| #include <linux/device.h> |
| #include <linux/of.h> |
| #include <linux/clk-provider.h> |
| |
| #define BILLION 1000000000 |
| |
| /* The common clock framework uses u8 to represent a parent index */ |
| #define PARENT_COUNT_MAX ((u32)U8_MAX) |
| |
| #define BAD_CLK_INDEX U8_MAX /* Can't ever be valid */ |
| #define BAD_CLK_NAME ((const char *)-1) |
| |
| #define BAD_SCALED_DIV_VALUE U64_MAX |
| |
| /* |
| * Utility macros for object flag management. If possible, flags |
| * should be defined such that 0 is the desired default value. |
| */ |
| #define FLAG(type, flag) BCM_CLK_ ## type ## _FLAGS_ ## flag |
| #define FLAG_SET(obj, type, flag) ((obj)->flags |= FLAG(type, flag)) |
| #define FLAG_CLEAR(obj, type, flag) ((obj)->flags &= ~(FLAG(type, flag))) |
| #define FLAG_FLIP(obj, type, flag) ((obj)->flags ^= FLAG(type, flag)) |
| #define FLAG_TEST(obj, type, flag) (!!((obj)->flags & FLAG(type, flag))) |
| |
| /* Clock field state tests */ |
| |
| #define gate_exists(gate) FLAG_TEST(gate, GATE, EXISTS) |
| #define gate_is_enabled(gate) FLAG_TEST(gate, GATE, ENABLED) |
| #define gate_is_hw_controllable(gate) FLAG_TEST(gate, GATE, HW) |
| #define gate_is_sw_controllable(gate) FLAG_TEST(gate, GATE, SW) |
| #define gate_is_sw_managed(gate) FLAG_TEST(gate, GATE, SW_MANAGED) |
| #define gate_is_no_disable(gate) FLAG_TEST(gate, GATE, NO_DISABLE) |
| |
| #define gate_flip_enabled(gate) FLAG_FLIP(gate, GATE, ENABLED) |
| |
| #define divider_exists(div) FLAG_TEST(div, DIV, EXISTS) |
| #define divider_is_fixed(div) FLAG_TEST(div, DIV, FIXED) |
| #define divider_has_fraction(div) (!divider_is_fixed(div) && \ |
| (div)->frac_width > 0) |
| |
| #define selector_exists(sel) ((sel)->width != 0) |
| #define trigger_exists(trig) FLAG_TEST(trig, TRIG, EXISTS) |
| |
| /* Clock type, used to tell common block what it's part of */ |
| enum bcm_clk_type { |
| bcm_clk_none, /* undefined clock type */ |
| bcm_clk_bus, |
| bcm_clk_core, |
| bcm_clk_peri |
| }; |
| |
| /* |
| * Each CCU defines a mapped area of memory containing registers |
| * used to manage clocks implemented by the CCU. Access to memory |
| * within the CCU's space is serialized by a spinlock. Before any |
| * (other) address can be written, a special access "password" value |
| * must be written to its WR_ACCESS register (located at the base |
| * address of the range). We keep track of the name of each CCU as |
| * it is set up, and maintain them in a list. |
| */ |
| struct ccu_data { |
| void __iomem *base; /* base of mapped address space */ |
| spinlock_t lock; /* serialization lock */ |
| bool write_enabled; /* write access is currently enabled */ |
| struct list_head links; /* for ccu_list */ |
| struct device_node *node; |
| struct clk_onecell_data data; |
| const char *name; |
| u32 range; /* byte range of address space */ |
| }; |
| |
| /* |
| * Gating control and status is managed by a 32-bit gate register. |
| * |
| * There are several types of gating available: |
| * - (no gate) |
| * A clock with no gate is assumed to be always enabled. |
| * - hardware-only gating (auto-gating) |
| * Enabling or disabling clocks with this type of gate is |
| * managed automatically by the hardware. Such clocks can be |
| * considered by the software to be enabled. The current status |
| * of auto-gated clocks can be read from the gate status bit. |
| * - software-only gating |
| * Auto-gating is not available for this type of clock. |
| * Instead, software manages whether it's enabled by setting or |
| * clearing the enable bit. The current gate status of a gate |
| * under software control can be read from the gate status bit. |
| * To ensure a change to the gating status is complete, the |
| * status bit can be polled to verify that the gate has entered |
| * the desired state. |
| * - selectable hardware or software gating |
| * Gating for this type of clock can be configured to be either |
| * under software or hardware control. Which type is in use is |
| * determined by the hw_sw_sel bit of the gate register. |
| */ |
| struct bcm_clk_gate { |
| u32 offset; /* gate register offset */ |
| u32 status_bit; /* 0: gate is disabled; 0: gatge is enabled */ |
| u32 en_bit; /* 0: disable; 1: enable */ |
| u32 hw_sw_sel_bit; /* 0: hardware gating; 1: software gating */ |
| u32 flags; /* BCM_CLK_GATE_FLAGS_* below */ |
| }; |
| |
| /* |
| * Gate flags: |
| * HW means this gate can be auto-gated |
| * SW means the state of this gate can be software controlled |
| * NO_DISABLE means this gate is (only) enabled if under software control |
| * SW_MANAGED means the status of this gate is under software control |
| * ENABLED means this software-managed gate is *supposed* to be enabled |
| */ |
| #define BCM_CLK_GATE_FLAGS_EXISTS ((u32)1 << 0) /* Gate is valid */ |
| #define BCM_CLK_GATE_FLAGS_HW ((u32)1 << 1) /* Can auto-gate */ |
| #define BCM_CLK_GATE_FLAGS_SW ((u32)1 << 2) /* Software control */ |
| #define BCM_CLK_GATE_FLAGS_NO_DISABLE ((u32)1 << 3) /* HW or enabled */ |
| #define BCM_CLK_GATE_FLAGS_SW_MANAGED ((u32)1 << 4) /* SW now in control */ |
| #define BCM_CLK_GATE_FLAGS_ENABLED ((u32)1 << 5) /* If SW_MANAGED */ |
| |
| /* |
| * Gate initialization macros. |
| * |
| * Any gate initially under software control will be enabled. |
| */ |
| |
| /* A hardware/software gate initially under software control */ |
| #define HW_SW_GATE(_offset, _status_bit, _en_bit, _hw_sw_sel_bit) \ |
| { \ |
| .offset = (_offset), \ |
| .status_bit = (_status_bit), \ |
| .en_bit = (_en_bit), \ |
| .hw_sw_sel_bit = (_hw_sw_sel_bit), \ |
| .flags = FLAG(GATE, HW)|FLAG(GATE, SW)| \ |
| FLAG(GATE, SW_MANAGED)|FLAG(GATE, ENABLED)| \ |
| FLAG(GATE, EXISTS), \ |
| } |
| |
| /* A hardware/software gate initially under hardware control */ |
| #define HW_SW_GATE_AUTO(_offset, _status_bit, _en_bit, _hw_sw_sel_bit) \ |
| { \ |
| .offset = (_offset), \ |
| .status_bit = (_status_bit), \ |
| .en_bit = (_en_bit), \ |
| .hw_sw_sel_bit = (_hw_sw_sel_bit), \ |
| .flags = FLAG(GATE, HW)|FLAG(GATE, SW)| \ |
| FLAG(GATE, EXISTS), \ |
| } |
| |
| /* A hardware-or-enabled gate (enabled if not under hardware control) */ |
| #define HW_ENABLE_GATE(_offset, _status_bit, _en_bit, _hw_sw_sel_bit) \ |
| { \ |
| .offset = (_offset), \ |
| .status_bit = (_status_bit), \ |
| .en_bit = (_en_bit), \ |
| .hw_sw_sel_bit = (_hw_sw_sel_bit), \ |
| .flags = FLAG(GATE, HW)|FLAG(GATE, SW)| \ |
| FLAG(GATE, NO_DISABLE)|FLAG(GATE, EXISTS), \ |
| } |
| |
| /* A software-only gate */ |
| #define SW_ONLY_GATE(_offset, _status_bit, _en_bit) \ |
| { \ |
| .offset = (_offset), \ |
| .status_bit = (_status_bit), \ |
| .en_bit = (_en_bit), \ |
| .flags = FLAG(GATE, SW)|FLAG(GATE, SW_MANAGED)| \ |
| FLAG(GATE, ENABLED)|FLAG(GATE, EXISTS), \ |
| } |
| |
| /* A hardware-only gate */ |
| #define HW_ONLY_GATE(_offset, _status_bit) \ |
| { \ |
| .offset = (_offset), \ |
| .status_bit = (_status_bit), \ |
| .flags = FLAG(GATE, HW)|FLAG(GATE, EXISTS), \ |
| } |
| |
| /* |
| * Each clock can have zero, one, or two dividers which change the |
| * output rate of the clock. Each divider can be either fixed or |
| * variable. If there are two dividers, they are the "pre-divider" |
| * and the "regular" or "downstream" divider. If there is only one, |
| * there is no pre-divider. |
| * |
| * A fixed divider is any non-zero (positive) value, and it |
| * indicates how the input rate is affected by the divider. |
| * |
| * The value of a variable divider is maintained in a sub-field of a |
| * 32-bit divider register. The position of the field in the |
| * register is defined by its offset and width. The value recorded |
| * in this field is always 1 less than the value it represents. |
| * |
| * In addition, a variable divider can indicate that some subset |
| * of its bits represent a "fractional" part of the divider. Such |
| * bits comprise the low-order portion of the divider field, and can |
| * be viewed as representing the portion of the divider that lies to |
| * the right of the decimal point. Most variable dividers have zero |
| * fractional bits. Variable dividers with non-zero fraction width |
| * still record a value 1 less than the value they represent; the |
| * added 1 does *not* affect the low-order bit in this case, it |
| * affects the bits above the fractional part only. (Often in this |
| * code a divider field value is distinguished from the value it |
| * represents by referring to the latter as a "divisor".) |
| * |
| * In order to avoid dealing with fractions, divider arithmetic is |
| * performed using "scaled" values. A scaled value is one that's |
| * been left-shifted by the fractional width of a divider. Dividing |
| * a scaled value by a scaled divisor produces the desired quotient |
| * without loss of precision and without any other special handling |
| * for fractions. |
| * |
| * The recorded value of a variable divider can be modified. To |
| * modify either divider (or both), a clock must be enabled (i.e., |
| * using its gate). In addition, a trigger register (described |
| * below) must be used to commit the change, and polled to verify |
| * the change is complete. |
| */ |
| struct bcm_clk_div { |
| union { |
| struct { /* variable divider */ |
| u32 offset; /* divider register offset */ |
| u32 shift; /* field shift */ |
| u32 width; /* field width */ |
| u32 frac_width; /* field fraction width */ |
| |
| u64 scaled_div; /* scaled divider value */ |
| }; |
| u32 fixed; /* non-zero fixed divider value */ |
| }; |
| u32 flags; /* BCM_CLK_DIV_FLAGS_* below */ |
| }; |
| |
| /* |
| * Divider flags: |
| * EXISTS means this divider exists |
| * FIXED means it is a fixed-rate divider |
| */ |
| #define BCM_CLK_DIV_FLAGS_EXISTS ((u32)1 << 0) /* Divider is valid */ |
| #define BCM_CLK_DIV_FLAGS_FIXED ((u32)1 << 1) /* Fixed-value */ |
| |
| /* Divider initialization macros */ |
| |
| /* A fixed (non-zero) divider */ |
| #define FIXED_DIVIDER(_value) \ |
| { \ |
| .fixed = (_value), \ |
| .flags = FLAG(DIV, EXISTS)|FLAG(DIV, FIXED), \ |
| } |
| |
| /* A divider with an integral divisor */ |
| #define DIVIDER(_offset, _shift, _width) \ |
| { \ |
| .offset = (_offset), \ |
| .shift = (_shift), \ |
| .width = (_width), \ |
| .scaled_div = BAD_SCALED_DIV_VALUE, \ |
| .flags = FLAG(DIV, EXISTS), \ |
| } |
| |
| /* A divider whose divisor has an integer and fractional part */ |
| #define FRAC_DIVIDER(_offset, _shift, _width, _frac_width) \ |
| { \ |
| .offset = (_offset), \ |
| .shift = (_shift), \ |
| .width = (_width), \ |
| .frac_width = (_frac_width), \ |
| .scaled_div = BAD_SCALED_DIV_VALUE, \ |
| .flags = FLAG(DIV, EXISTS), \ |
| } |
| |
| /* |
| * Clocks may have multiple "parent" clocks. If there is more than |
| * one, a selector must be specified to define which of the parent |
| * clocks is currently in use. The selected clock is indicated in a |
| * sub-field of a 32-bit selector register. The range of |
| * representable selector values typically exceeds the number of |
| * available parent clocks. Occasionally the reset value of a |
| * selector field is explicitly set to a (specific) value that does |
| * not correspond to a defined input clock. |
| * |
| * We register all known parent clocks with the common clock code |
| * using a packed array (i.e., no empty slots) of (parent) clock |
| * names, and refer to them later using indexes into that array. |
| * We maintain an array of selector values indexed by common clock |
| * index values in order to map between these common clock indexes |
| * and the selector values used by the hardware. |
| * |
| * Like dividers, a selector can be modified, but to do so a clock |
| * must be enabled, and a trigger must be used to commit the change. |
| */ |
| struct bcm_clk_sel { |
| u32 offset; /* selector register offset */ |
| u32 shift; /* field shift */ |
| u32 width; /* field width */ |
| |
| u32 parent_count; /* number of entries in parent_sel[] */ |
| u32 *parent_sel; /* array of parent selector values */ |
| u8 clk_index; /* current selected index in parent_sel[] */ |
| }; |
| |
| /* Selector initialization macro */ |
| #define SELECTOR(_offset, _shift, _width) \ |
| { \ |
| .offset = (_offset), \ |
| .shift = (_shift), \ |
| .width = (_width), \ |
| .clk_index = BAD_CLK_INDEX, \ |
| } |
| |
| /* |
| * Making changes to a variable divider or a selector for a clock |
| * requires the use of a trigger. A trigger is defined by a single |
| * bit within a register. To signal a change, a 1 is written into |
| * that bit. To determine when the change has been completed, that |
| * trigger bit is polled; the read value will be 1 while the change |
| * is in progress, and 0 when it is complete. |
| * |
| * Occasionally a clock will have more than one trigger. In this |
| * case, the "pre-trigger" will be used when changing a clock's |
| * selector and/or its pre-divider. |
| */ |
| struct bcm_clk_trig { |
| u32 offset; /* trigger register offset */ |
| u32 bit; /* trigger bit */ |
| u32 flags; /* BCM_CLK_TRIG_FLAGS_* below */ |
| }; |
| |
| /* |
| * Trigger flags: |
| * EXISTS means this trigger exists |
| */ |
| #define BCM_CLK_TRIG_FLAGS_EXISTS ((u32)1 << 0) /* Trigger is valid */ |
| |
| /* Trigger initialization macro */ |
| #define TRIGGER(_offset, _bit) \ |
| { \ |
| .offset = (_offset), \ |
| .bit = (_bit), \ |
| .flags = FLAG(TRIG, EXISTS), \ |
| } |
| |
| struct peri_clk_data { |
| struct bcm_clk_gate gate; |
| struct bcm_clk_trig pre_trig; |
| struct bcm_clk_div pre_div; |
| struct bcm_clk_trig trig; |
| struct bcm_clk_div div; |
| struct bcm_clk_sel sel; |
| const char *clocks[]; /* must be last; use CLOCKS() to declare */ |
| }; |
| #define CLOCKS(...) { __VA_ARGS__, NULL, } |
| #define NO_CLOCKS { NULL, } /* Must use of no parent clocks */ |
| |
| struct kona_clk { |
| struct clk_hw hw; |
| struct clk_init_data init_data; |
| const char *name; /* name of this clock */ |
| struct ccu_data *ccu; /* ccu this clock is associated with */ |
| enum bcm_clk_type type; |
| union { |
| void *data; |
| struct peri_clk_data *peri; |
| }; |
| }; |
| #define to_kona_clk(_hw) \ |
| container_of(_hw, struct kona_clk, hw) |
| |
| /* Exported globals */ |
| |
| extern struct clk_ops kona_peri_clk_ops; |
| |
| /* Help functions */ |
| |
| #define PERI_CLK_SETUP(clks, ccu, id, name) \ |
| clks[id] = kona_clk_setup(ccu, #name, bcm_clk_peri, &name ## _data) |
| |
| /* Externally visible functions */ |
| |
| extern u64 do_div_round_closest(u64 dividend, unsigned long divisor); |
| extern u64 scaled_div_max(struct bcm_clk_div *div); |
| extern u64 scaled_div_build(struct bcm_clk_div *div, u32 div_value, |
| u32 billionths); |
| |
| extern struct clk *kona_clk_setup(struct ccu_data *ccu, const char *name, |
| enum bcm_clk_type type, void *data); |
| extern void __init kona_dt_ccu_setup(struct device_node *node, |
| int (*ccu_clks_setup)(struct ccu_data *)); |
| extern bool __init kona_ccu_init(struct ccu_data *ccu); |
| |
| #endif /* _CLK_KONA_H */ |