On 07/22/2014 07:50 PM, Stephen Warren wrote:
On 07/17/2014 08:13 AM, Tomeu Vizoso wrote:
Adds a way for clock consumers to set maximum and minimum rates. This can be used for thermal drivers to set ceiling rates, or by misc. drivers to set floor rates to assure a minimum performance level.
diff --git a/drivers/clk/clk.c b/drivers/clk/clk.c
+struct rate_constraint {
- struct hlist_node node;
- const char *dev_id;
- const char *con_id;
- enum constraint_type type;
- unsigned long rate;
+};
I would personally still prefer either:
a) The struct rate_constraints be stored in struct clk rather than struct clk_core, so they're stored in the container that "set" the constraints. This would mean iterating over a struct clk_core's associated struct clks, then iterating over the struct rate_constraints within each struct clk.
or:
b) struct rate_constraint to contain a pointer to the struct clk that created the constraint, rather than copying the dev_id/con_id from that struct clk into the struct rate_constraint.
With either of those changes, the constraints are directly associated with the clock client object that created the constraint much better than right now, where the matching is only because the struct clk and struct rate_constraint "happen to" have the same dev_id/con_id values.
Still, this is a pretty minor issue, and overall this series looks reasonable to me at a quick look.
Yeah, I agree and personally prefer a), but given the little feedback that I have gotten so far on the refactoring, I'm starting to consider forgetting about the per-user clk struct and go instead with a request-based API similar to that of pm_qos, for setting floor and ceiling frequencies.
Regards,
Tomeu