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author | Michal Kazior <michal.kazior@tieto.com> | 2015-05-18 09:38:18 +0000 |
---|---|---|
committer | Kalle Valo <kvalo@qca.qualcomm.com> | 2015-05-22 13:39:28 +0300 |
commit | 77258d409ce45890104e3da11d0261402c49aee1 (patch) | |
tree | c8d74546079106036d67ead4504423d167225e11 /drivers/net/wireless/ath/ath10k/pci.h | |
parent | 917826be9f46b13604fdfc9954dd9ce69dea93f3 (diff) | |
download | talos-op-linux-77258d409ce45890104e3da11d0261402c49aee1.tar.gz talos-op-linux-77258d409ce45890104e3da11d0261402c49aee1.zip |
ath10k: enable pci soc powersaving
By using SOC_WAKE register it is possible to bring
down power consumption of QCA61X4 from 36mA to
16mA when associated and idle.
Currently the sleep threshold/grace period is at a
very conservative value of 60ms.
Contrary to QCA61X4 the QCA988X firmware doesn't
have Rx/beacon filtering available for client mode
and SWBA events are used for beaconing in AP/IBSS
so the SoC needs to be woken up at least every
~100ms in most cases. This means that QCA988X
is at a disadvantage and the power consumption
won't drop as much as for QCA61X4.
Due to putting irq-safe spinlocks on every MMIO
read/write it is expected this can cause a little
performance regression on some systems. I haven't
done any thorough measurements but some of my
tests don't show any extreme degradation.
The patch removes some explicit pci_wake calls
that were added in 320e14b8db51aa ("ath10k: fix
some pci wake/sleep issues"). This is safe because
all MMIO accesses are now wrapped and the device
is woken up automatically if necessary.
Signed-off-by: Michal Kazior <michal.kazior@tieto.com>
Signed-off-by: Kalle Valo <kvalo@qca.qualcomm.com>
Diffstat (limited to 'drivers/net/wireless/ath/ath10k/pci.h')
-rw-r--r-- | drivers/net/wireless/ath/ath10k/pci.h | 89 |
1 files changed, 41 insertions, 48 deletions
diff --git a/drivers/net/wireless/ath/ath10k/pci.h b/drivers/net/wireless/ath/ath10k/pci.h index ee2173d61257..d7696ddc03c4 100644 --- a/drivers/net/wireless/ath/ath10k/pci.h +++ b/drivers/net/wireless/ath/ath10k/pci.h @@ -191,6 +191,35 @@ struct ath10k_pci { * device bootup is executed and re-programmed later. */ u16 link_ctl; + + /* Protects ps_awake and ps_wake_refcount */ + spinlock_t ps_lock; + + /* The device has a special powersave-oriented register. When device is + * considered asleep it drains less power and driver is forbidden from + * accessing most MMIO registers. If host were to access them without + * waking up the device might scribble over host memory or return + * 0xdeadbeef readouts. + */ + unsigned long ps_wake_refcount; + + /* Waking up takes some time (up to 2ms in some cases) so it can be bad + * for latency. To mitigate this the device isn't immediately allowed + * to sleep after all references are undone - instead there's a grace + * period after which the powersave register is updated unless some + * activity to/from device happened in the meantime. + * + * Also see comments on ATH10K_PCI_SLEEP_GRACE_PERIOD_MSEC. + */ + struct timer_list ps_timer; + + /* MMIO registers are used to communicate with the device. With + * intensive traffic accessing powersave register would be a bit + * wasteful overhead and would needlessly stall CPU. It is far more + * efficient to rely on a variable in RAM and update it only upon + * powersave register state changes. + */ + bool ps_awake; }; static inline struct ath10k_pci *ath10k_pci_priv(struct ath10k *ar) @@ -215,61 +244,25 @@ static inline struct ath10k_pci *ath10k_pci_priv(struct ath10k *ar) * for this device; but that's not guaranteed. */ #define TARG_CPU_SPACE_TO_CE_SPACE(ar, pci_addr, addr) \ - (((ioread32((pci_addr)+(SOC_CORE_BASE_ADDRESS| \ + (((ath10k_pci_read32(ar, (SOC_CORE_BASE_ADDRESS | \ CORE_CTRL_ADDRESS)) & 0x7ff) << 21) | \ 0x100000 | ((addr) & 0xfffff)) /* Wait up to this many Ms for a Diagnostic Access CE operation to complete */ #define DIAG_ACCESS_CE_TIMEOUT_MS 10 -/* Target exposes its registers for direct access. However before host can - * access them it needs to make sure the target is awake (ath10k_pci_wake, - * ath10k_pci_wake_wait, ath10k_pci_is_awake). Once target is awake it won't go - * to sleep unless host tells it to (ath10k_pci_sleep). - * - * If host tries to access target registers without waking it up it can - * scribble over host memory. - * - * If target is asleep waking it up may take up to even 2ms. - */ - -static inline void ath10k_pci_write32(struct ath10k *ar, u32 offset, - u32 value) -{ - struct ath10k_pci *ar_pci = ath10k_pci_priv(ar); - - iowrite32(value, ar_pci->mem + offset); -} - -static inline u32 ath10k_pci_read32(struct ath10k *ar, u32 offset) -{ - struct ath10k_pci *ar_pci = ath10k_pci_priv(ar); - - return ioread32(ar_pci->mem + offset); -} - -static inline u32 ath10k_pci_soc_read32(struct ath10k *ar, u32 addr) -{ - return ath10k_pci_read32(ar, RTC_SOC_BASE_ADDRESS + addr); -} +void ath10k_pci_write32(struct ath10k *ar, u32 offset, u32 value); +void ath10k_pci_soc_write32(struct ath10k *ar, u32 addr, u32 val); +void ath10k_pci_reg_write32(struct ath10k *ar, u32 addr, u32 val); -static inline void ath10k_pci_soc_write32(struct ath10k *ar, u32 addr, u32 val) -{ - ath10k_pci_write32(ar, RTC_SOC_BASE_ADDRESS + addr, val); -} +u32 ath10k_pci_read32(struct ath10k *ar, u32 offset); +u32 ath10k_pci_soc_read32(struct ath10k *ar, u32 addr); +u32 ath10k_pci_reg_read32(struct ath10k *ar, u32 addr); -static inline u32 ath10k_pci_reg_read32(struct ath10k *ar, u32 addr) -{ - struct ath10k_pci *ar_pci = ath10k_pci_priv(ar); - - return ioread32(ar_pci->mem + PCIE_LOCAL_BASE_ADDRESS + addr); -} - -static inline void ath10k_pci_reg_write32(struct ath10k *ar, u32 addr, u32 val) -{ - struct ath10k_pci *ar_pci = ath10k_pci_priv(ar); - - iowrite32(val, ar_pci->mem + PCIE_LOCAL_BASE_ADDRESS + addr); -} +/* QCA6174 is known to have Tx/Rx issues when SOC_WAKE register is poked too + * frequently. To avoid this put SoC to sleep after a very conservative grace + * period. Adjust with great care. + */ +#define ATH10K_PCI_SLEEP_GRACE_PERIOD_MSEC 60 #endif /* _PCI_H_ */ |