1. 09 Aug, 2019 1 commit
    • Suman Anna's avatar
      iommu/omap: fix boot issue on remoteprocs with AMMU/Unicache · 3846a3b9
      Suman Anna authored
      Support has been added to the OMAP IOMMU driver to fix a boot hang
      issue on OMAP remoteprocs with AMMU/Unicache, caused by an improper
      AMMU/Unicache state upon initial deassertion of the processor reset.
      The issue is described in detail in the next three paragraphs.
      
      All the Cortex M3/M4 IPU processor subsystems in OMAP SoCs have a
      AMMU/Unicache IP that dictates the memory attributes for addresses
      seen by the processor cores. The AMMU/Unicache is configured/enabled
      by the SCACHE_CONFIG.BYPASS bit - a value of 1 enables the cache and
      mandates all addresses accessed by M3/M4 be defined in the AMMU. This
      bit is not programmable from the host processor. The M3/M4 boot
      sequence starts out with the AMMU/Unicache in disabled state, and
      SYS/BIOS programs the AMMU regions and enables the Unicache during
      one of its initial boot steps. This SCACHE_CONFIG.BYPASS bit is
      however enabled by default whenever a RET reset is applied to the IP,
      irrespective of whether it was previously enabled or not. The AMMU
      registers lose their context whenever this reset is applied. The reset
      is effective as long as the MMU portion of the subsystem is enabled
      and clocked. This behavior is common to all the IPU and DSP subsystems
      that have an AMMU/Unicache.
      
      The IPU boot sequence involves enabling and programming the MMU, and
      loading the processor and releasing the reset(s) for the processor.
      The PM setup code currently sets the target state for most of the
      power domains to RET. The L2 MMU can be enabled, programmed and
      accessed properly just fine with the domain in hardware supervised
      mode, while the power domain goes through a RET->ON->RET transition
      during the programming sequence. However, the ON->RET transition
      asserts a RET reset, and the SCACHE_CONFIG.BYPASS bit gets auto-set.
      An AMMU fault is thrown immediately when the M3/M4 core's reset is
      released since the first instruction address itself will not be
      defined in any valid AMMU regions. The ON->RET transition happens
      automatically on the power domain after enabling the iommu due to
      the hardware supervised mode.
      
      This patch adds and invokes the .set_pwrdm_constraint pdata ops, if
      present, during the OMAP IOMMU enable and disable functions to resolve
      the above boot hang issue. The ops will allow to invoke a mach-omap2
      layer API pwrdm_set_next_pwrst() in a multi-arch kernel environment.
      The ops also returns the current power domain state while enforcing
      the constraint so that the driver can store it and use it to set back
      the power domain state while releasing the constraint. The pdata ops
      implementation restricts the target power domain to ON during enable,
      and back to the original power domain state during disable, and thereby
      eliminating the conditions for the boot issue. The implementation is
      effective only when the original power domain state is either RET or
      OFF, and is a no-op when it is ON or INACTIVE.
      
      The .set_pwrdm_constraint ops need to be plugged in pdata-quirks
      for the affected remote processors to be able to boot properly.
      
      Note that the current issue is seen only on kernels with the affected
      power domains programmed to enter RET. For eg., IPU1 on DRA7xx is in a
      separate domain and is susceptible to this bug, while the IPU2 subsystem
      is within CORE power domain, and CORE RET is not supported on this SoC.
      IPUs on OMAP4 and OMAP5 are also susceptible since they are in CORE power
      domain, and CORE RET is a valid power target on these SoCs.
      Signed-off-by: default avatarSuman Anna <s-anna@ti.com>
      Signed-off-by: default avatarJoerg Roedel <jroedel@suse.de>
      3846a3b9
  2. 05 Aug, 2019 1 commit
  3. 04 Aug, 2019 10 commits
  4. 03 Aug, 2019 28 commits