Commit Graph

3 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Linus Torvalds
e70140ba0d Get rid of 'remove_new' relic from platform driver struct
The continual trickle of small conversion patches is grating on me, and
is really not helping.  Just get rid of the 'remove_new' member
function, which is just an alias for the plain 'remove', and had a
comment to that effect:

  /*
   * .remove_new() is a relic from a prototype conversion of .remove().
   * New drivers are supposed to implement .remove(). Once all drivers are
   * converted to not use .remove_new any more, it will be dropped.
   */

This was just a tree-wide 'sed' script that replaced '.remove_new' with
'.remove', with some care taken to turn a subsequent tab into two tabs
to make things line up.

I did do some minimal manual whitespace adjustment for places that used
spaces to line things up.

Then I just removed the old (sic) .remove_new member function, and this
is the end result.  No more unnecessary conversion noise.

Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@linux-foundation.org>
2024-12-01 15:12:43 -08:00
Uwe Kleine-König
14532a01fe PM / devfreq: sun8i-a33-mbus: Convert to platform remove callback returning void
The .remove() callback for a platform driver returns an int which makes
many driver authors wrongly assume it's possible to do error handling by
returning an error code. However the value returned is ignored (apart
from emitting a warning) and this typically results in resource leaks.

To improve here there is a quest to make the remove callback return
void. In the first step of this quest all drivers are converted to
.remove_new(), which already returns void. Eventually after all drivers
are converted, .remove_new() will be renamed to .remove().

Trivially convert this driver from always returning zero in the remove
callback to the void returning variant.

Signed-off-by: Uwe Kleine-König <u.kleine-koenig@pengutronix.de>
Signed-off-by: Chanwoo Choi <cw00.choi@samsung.com>
2024-05-08 23:53:08 +09:00
Samuel Holland
8bfd4858b4 PM / devfreq: Add a driver for the sun8i/sun50i MBUS
This driver works by adjusting the divider on the DRAM controller's
module clock. Thus there is no fixed set of OPPs, only "full speed" down
to "quarter speed" (or whatever the maximum divider is on that variant).

It makes use of the MDFS hardware in the MBUS, in "DFS" mode, which
takes care of updating registers during the critical section while DRAM
is inaccessible.

This driver should support several sunxi SoCs, starting with the A33,
which have a DesignWare DDR3 controller with merged PHY register space
and the matching MBUS register layout (so not A63 or later). However,
the driver has only been tested on the A64/H5, so those are the only
compatibles enabled for now.

Acked-by: Chanwoo Choi <cw00.choi@samsung.com>
Signed-off-by: Samuel Holland <samuel@sholland.org>
Signed-off-by: Chanwoo Choi <cw00.choi@samsung.com>
2021-12-10 15:56:07 +09:00