Mark,
On Tue, Dec 28, 2010 at 8:18 AM, Mark Brown broonie@opensource.wolfsonmicro.com wrote:
On Mon, Dec 27, 2010 at 10:17:02PM -0600, David Lambert wrote:
- case 19200000:
- if (div == 5)
- div_sel = 0x1;
- else if (div == 8)
- div_sel = 0x0;
- break;
A switch statement for the valid div values would feel more natural, together with a default case to report errors though that's handled below so could be skipped.
- /* Acknowledge irq event */
- omap_dmic_write(dmic, OMAP_DMIC_IRQSTATUS, irq_status);
- if (irq_status & OMAP_DMIC_IRQ_FULL)
Blank line between these two.
- dev_dbg(dmic->dev, "DMIC FIFO error %x\n", irq_status);
- if (irq_status & OMAP_DMIC_IRQ_EMPTY)
- dev_dbg(dmic->dev, "DMIC FIFO error %x\n", irq_status);
I'd expect these errors to be displayed by default.
- if (irq_status & OMAP_DMIC_IRQ)
- dev_dbg(dmic->dev, "DMIC write request\n");
A comment explaining why we don't actually do anything with the request would be helpful. Given that we're ignoring the event it'd seem better to just leave it masked and not take the interrupt in the first place.
Since the IRQ handler isn't really doing anything in this driver, would it better to just not have one?
+static int omap_dmic_dai_startup(struct snd_pcm_substream *substream,
- struct snd_soc_dai *dai)
+{
- struct omap_dmic *dmic = snd_soc_dai_get_drvdata(dai);
- if (!dmic->active++)
- pm_runtime_get_sync(dmic->dev);
The pm_runtime API does refcounting for you so you should be able to just skip the active count check here, IIRC there's a pm_runtime API you could use to query if the DMIC is enabled so you could skip the local refcount entirely.
I haven't been able to find a an API to query it, but I could just reference the count directly with dmic->dev->power.usage_count.
+static int omap_dmic_dai_hw_free(struct snd_pcm_substream *substream,
- struct snd_soc_dai *dai)
+{
- struct omap_dmic *dmic = snd_soc_dai_get_drvdata(dai);
- struct omap_dmic_link *link = dmic->link;
- int ret = 0;
- if (dmic->active == 1) {
- ret = omap_dmic_close(dmic);
- link->channels = 0;
- }
I'd feel a bit more happy if this were done in the same place as the drop of the refcount though this should actually be OK I think.
- switch (freq) {
- case 19200000:
- case 24000000:
- case 24576000:
- case 12000000:
- dmic->clk_freq = freq;
- break;
- default:
- dev_err(dai->dev, "clk freq not supported %d\n", freq);
- ret = -EINVAL;
- goto err_freq;
- }
Can't you ask the parent clock what rate it's set to?
Didn't really think there was a need for that on the audio driver. There are clock API's available to query that already.
- ret = request_threaded_irq(dmic->irq, NULL, omap_dmic_irq_handler,
- IRQF_ONESHOT, "DMIC", (void *)dmic);
- if (ret) {
- dev_err(dmic->dev, "irq request failed\n");
- goto err_irq;
- }
Does this really need to be a threaded IRQ - the IRQ was just reading from CPU registers as far as I remember?
+MODULE_AUTHOR("David Lambert dlambert@ti.com"); +MODULE_DESCRIPTION("OMAP DMIC SoC Interface"); +MODULE_LICENSE("GPL");
Should have a MODULE_ALIAS too in case it gets built modular.
-- David Lambert OMAP™ Multimedia 214-567-5692