@@ -15,9 +15,36 @@ struct pwm_lpss_boardinfo {
unsigned int npwm;
unsigned long base_unit_bits;
/*
- * Some versions of the IP may stuck in the state machine if enable
- * bit is not set, and hence update bit will show busy status till
- * the reset. For the rest it may be otherwise.
+ * NOTE:
+ * Intel Broxton, Apollo Lake, and Gemini Lake have different programming flow.
+ *
+ * Initial Enable or First Activation
+ * 1. Program the base unit and on time divisor values.
+ * 2. Set the software update bit.
+ * 3. Poll in a loop on the PWMCTRL bit until software update bit is cleared.+
+ * 4. Enable the PWM output by setting PWM Enable.
+ * 5. Repeat the above steps for the next PWM Module.
+ *
+ * Dynamic update while PWM is Enabled
+ * 1. Program the base unit and on-time divisor values.
+ * 2. Set the software update bit.
+ * 3. Repeat the above steps for the next PWM module.
+ *
+ * + After setting PWMCTRL register's SW update bit, hardware automatically
+ * deasserts the SW update bit after a brief delay. It was observed that
+ * setting of PWM enable is typically done via read-modify-write of the PWMCTRL
+ * register. If there is no/little delay between setting software update bit
+ * and setting enable bit via read-modify-write, it is possible that the read
+ * could return with software enable as 1. In that case, the last write to set
+ * enable to 1 could also set sw_update to 1. If this happens, sw_update gets
+ * stuck and the driver code can hang as it explicitly waits for sw_update bit
+ * to be 0 after setting the enable bit to 1. To avoid this race condition,
+ * SW should poll on the software update bit to make sure that it is 0 before
+ * doing the read-modify-write to set the enable bit to 1.
+ *
+ * Also, we noted that if sw_update bit was set in step #1 above then when it
+ * is set again in step #2, sw_update bit never gets cleared and the flow hangs.
+ * As such, we need to make sure that sw_update bit is 0 when doing step #1.
*/
bool bypass;
/*
Instead of an odd comment, cite the documentation, which says more clearly what's going on with the programming flow on some of the Intel SoCs. Signed-off-by: Andy Shevchenko <andriy.shevchenko@linux.intel.com> --- include/linux/platform_data/x86/pwm-lpss.h | 33 ++++++++++++++++++++-- 1 file changed, 30 insertions(+), 3 deletions(-)