• Douglas Anderson's avatar
    pinctrl: qcom: Avoid glitching lines when we first mux to output · d21f4b7f
    Douglas Anderson authored
    Back in the description of commit e440e30e ("arm64: dts: qcom:
    sc7180: Avoid glitching SPI CS at bootup on trogdor") we described a
    problem that we were seeing on trogdor devices. I'll re-summarize here
    but you can also re-read the original commit.
    
    On trogdor devices, the BIOS is setting up the SPI chip select as:
    - mux special function (SPI chip select)
    - output enable
    - output low (unused because we've muxed as special function)
    
    In the kernel, however, we've moved away from using the chip select
    line as special function. Since the kernel wants to fully control the
    chip select it's far more efficient to treat the line as a GPIO rather
    than sending packet-like commands to the GENI firmware every time we
    want the line to toggle.
    
    When we transition from how the BIOS had the pin configured to how the
    kernel has the pin configured we end up glitching the line. That's
    because we _first_ change the mux of the line and then later set its
    output. This glitch is bad and can confuse the device on the other end
    of the line.
    
    The old commit e440e30e ("arm64: dts: qcom: sc7180: Avoid
    glitching SPI CS at bootup on trogdor") fixed the glitch, though the
    solution was far from elegant. It essentially did the thing that
    everyone always hates: encoding a sequential program in device tree,
    even if it's a simple one. It also, unfortunately, got broken by
    commit b991f8c3 ("pinctrl: core: Handling pinmux and pinconf
    separately"). After that commit we did all the muxing _first_ even
    though the config (set the pin to output high) was listed first. :(
    
    I looked at ideas for how to solve this more properly. My first
    thought was to use the "init" pinctrl state. In theory the "init"
    pinctrl state is supposed to be exactly for achieving glitch-free
    transitions. My dream would have been for the "init" pinctrl to do
    nothing at all. That would let us delay the automatic pin muxing until
    the driver could set things up and call pinctrl_init_done(). In other
    words, my dream was:
    
      /* Request the GPIO; init it 1 (because DT says GPIO_ACTIVE_LOW) */
      devm_gpiod_get_index(dev, "cs", GPIOD_OUT_LOW);
      /* Output should be right, so we can remux, yay! */
      pinctrl_init_done(dev);
    
    Unfortunately, it didn't work out. The primary reason is that the MSM
    GPIO driver implements gpio_request_enable(). As documented in
    pinmux.h, that function automatically remuxes a line as a GPIO. ...and
    it does this remuxing _before_ specifying the output of the pin. You
    can see in gpiod_get_index() that we call gpiod_request() before
    gpiod_configure_flags(). gpiod_request() isn't passed any flags so it
    has no idea what the eventual output will be.
    
    We could have debates about whether or not the automatic remuxing to
    GPIO for the MSM pinctrl was a good idea or not, but at this point I
    think there is a plethora of code that's relying on it and I certainly
    wouldn't suggest changing it.
    
    Alternatively, we could try to come up with a way to pass the initial
    output state to gpio_request_enable() and plumb all that through. That
    seems like it would be doable, but we'd have to plumb it through
    several layers in the stack.
    
    This patch implements yet another alternative. Here, we specifically
    avoid glitching the first time a pin is muxed to GPIO function if the
    direction of the pin is output. The idea is that we can read the state
    of the pin before we set the mux and make sure that the re-mux won't
    change the state.
    
    NOTES:
    - We only do this the first time since later swaps between mux states
      might want to preserve the old output value. In other words, I
      wouldn't want to break a driver that did:
         gpiod_set_value(g, 1);
         pinctrl_select_state(pinctrl, special_state);
         pinctrl_select_default_state();
         /* We should be driving 1 even if "special_state" made the pin 0 */
    - It's safe to do this the first time since the driver _couldn't_ have
      explicitly set a state. In order to even be able to control the GPIO
      (at least using gpiod) we have to have requested it which would have
      counted as the first mux.
    - In theory, instead of keeping track of the first time a pin was set
      as a GPIO we could enable the glitch-free behavior only when
      msm_pinmux_request_gpio() is in the callchain. That works an enables
      my "dream" implementation above where we use an "init" state to
      solve this. However, it's nice not to have to do this. By handling
      just the first transition to GPIO we can simply let the normal
      "default" remuxing happen and we can be assured that there won't be
      a glitch.
    
    Before this change I could see the glitch reported on the EC console
    when booting. It would say this when booting the kernel:
      Unexpected state 1 in CSNRE ISR
    
    After this change there is no error reported.
    
    Note that I haven't reproduced the original problem described in
    e440e30e ("arm64: dts: qcom: sc7180: Avoid glitching SPI CS at
    bootup on trogdor") but I could believe it might happen in certain
    timing conditions.
    
    Fixes: b991f8c3 ("pinctrl: core: Handling pinmux and pinconf separately")
    Signed-off-by: default avatarDouglas Anderson <dianders@chromium.org>
    Reviewed-by: default avatarStephen Boyd <swboyd@chromium.org>
    Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/20221014103217.1.I656bb2c976ed626e5d37294eb252c1cf3be769dc@changeidSigned-off-by: default avatarLinus Walleij <linus.walleij@linaro.org>
    d21f4b7f
pinctrl-msm.c 39.6 KB