clock: Provide builtin multiplier/divider

It is quite common for a clock tree to involve possibly programmable
clock multipliers or dividers, where the frequency of a clock is for
instance divided by 8 to produce a slower clock to feed to a
particular device.

Currently we provide no convenient mechanism for modelling this.  You
can implement it by having an input Clock and an output Clock, and
manually setting the period of the output clock in the period-changed
callback of the input clock, but that's quite clunky.

This patch adds support in the Clock objects themselves for setting a
multiplier or divider.  The effect of setting this on a clock is that
when the clock's period is changed, all the children of the clock are
set to period * multiplier / divider, rather than being set to the
same period as the parent clock.

Signed-off-by: Peter Maydell <peter.maydell@linaro.org>
Reviewed-by: Alexandre Iooss <erdnaxe@crans.org>
Reviewed-by: Alistair Francis <alistair.francis@wdc.com>
Reviewed-by: Philippe Mathieu-Daudé <f4bug@amsat.org>
Reviewed-by: Luc Michel <luc@lmichel.fr>
Reviewed-by: Damien Hedde <damien.hedde@greensocs.com>
Message-id: 20210812093356.1946-10-peter.maydell@linaro.org
This commit is contained in:
Peter Maydell 2021-08-12 10:33:40 +01:00
parent a860df4f54
commit 99abcbc760
5 changed files with 119 additions and 5 deletions

View File

@ -260,6 +260,29 @@ clocks get the new clock period value: *Clock 2*, *Clock 3* and *Clock 4*.
It is not possible to disconnect a clock or to change the clock connection
after it is connected.
Clock multiplier and divider settings
-------------------------------------
By default, when clocks are connected together, the child
clocks run with the same period as their source (parent) clock.
The Clock API supports a built-in period multiplier/divider
mechanism so you can configure a clock to make its children
run at a different period from its own. If you call the
``clock_set_mul_div()`` function you can specify the clock's
multiplier and divider values. The children of that clock
will all run with a period of ``parent_period * multiplier / divider``.
For instance, if the clock has a frequency of 8MHz and you set its
multiplier to 2 and its divider to 3, the child clocks will run
at 12MHz.
You can change the multiplier and divider of a clock at runtime,
so you can use this to model clock controller devices which
have guest-programmable frequency multipliers or dividers.
Note that ``clock_set_mul_div()`` does not automatically call
``clock_propagate()``. If you make a runtime change to the
multiplier or divider you must call clock_propagate() yourself.
Unconnected input clocks
------------------------

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@ -14,12 +14,50 @@
#include "migration/vmstate.h"
#include "hw/clock.h"
static bool muldiv_needed(void *opaque)
{
Clock *clk = opaque;
return clk->multiplier != 1 || clk->divider != 1;
}
static int clock_pre_load(void *opaque)
{
Clock *clk = opaque;
/*
* The initial out-of-reset settings of the Clock might have been
* configured by the device to be different from what we set
* in clock_initfn(), so we must here set the default values to
* be used if they are not in the inbound migration state.
*/
clk->multiplier = 1;
clk->divider = 1;
return 0;
}
const VMStateDescription vmstate_muldiv = {
.name = "clock/muldiv",
.version_id = 1,
.minimum_version_id = 1,
.needed = muldiv_needed,
.fields = (VMStateField[]) {
VMSTATE_UINT32(multiplier, Clock),
VMSTATE_UINT32(divider, Clock),
},
};
const VMStateDescription vmstate_clock = {
.name = "clock",
.version_id = 0,
.minimum_version_id = 0,
.pre_load = clock_pre_load,
.fields = (VMStateField[]) {
VMSTATE_UINT64(period, Clock),
VMSTATE_END_OF_LIST()
}
},
.subsections = (const VMStateDescription*[]) {
&vmstate_muldiv,
NULL
},
};

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@ -64,6 +64,15 @@ bool clock_set(Clock *clk, uint64_t period)
return true;
}
static uint64_t clock_get_child_period(Clock *clk)
{
/*
* Return the period to be used for child clocks, which is the parent
* clock period adjusted for for multiplier and divider effects.
*/
return muldiv64(clk->period, clk->multiplier, clk->divider);
}
static void clock_call_callback(Clock *clk, ClockEvent event)
{
/*
@ -78,15 +87,16 @@ static void clock_call_callback(Clock *clk, ClockEvent event)
static void clock_propagate_period(Clock *clk, bool call_callbacks)
{
Clock *child;
uint64_t child_period = clock_get_child_period(clk);
QLIST_FOREACH(child, &clk->children, sibling) {
if (child->period != clk->period) {
if (child->period != child_period) {
if (call_callbacks) {
clock_call_callback(child, ClockPreUpdate);
}
child->period = clk->period;
child->period = child_period;
trace_clock_update(CLOCK_PATH(child), CLOCK_PATH(clk),
CLOCK_PERIOD_TO_HZ(clk->period),
CLOCK_PERIOD_TO_HZ(child->period),
call_callbacks);
if (call_callbacks) {
clock_call_callback(child, ClockUpdate);
@ -110,7 +120,7 @@ void clock_set_source(Clock *clk, Clock *src)
trace_clock_set_source(CLOCK_PATH(clk), CLOCK_PATH(src));
clk->period = src->period;
clk->period = clock_get_child_period(src);
QLIST_INSERT_HEAD(&src->children, clk, sibling);
clk->source = src;
clock_propagate_period(clk, false);
@ -133,10 +143,23 @@ char *clock_display_freq(Clock *clk)
return freq_to_str(clock_get_hz(clk));
}
void clock_set_mul_div(Clock *clk, uint32_t multiplier, uint32_t divider)
{
assert(divider != 0);
trace_clock_set_mul_div(CLOCK_PATH(clk), clk->multiplier, multiplier,
clk->divider, divider);
clk->multiplier = multiplier;
clk->divider = divider;
}
static void clock_initfn(Object *obj)
{
Clock *clk = CLOCK(obj);
clk->multiplier = 1;
clk->divider = 1;
QLIST_INIT(&clk->children);
}

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@ -34,3 +34,4 @@ clock_disconnect(const char *clk) "'%s'"
clock_set(const char *clk, uint64_t old, uint64_t new) "'%s', %"PRIu64"Hz->%"PRIu64"Hz"
clock_propagate(const char *clk) "'%s'"
clock_update(const char *clk, const char *src, uint64_t hz, int cb) "'%s', src='%s', val=%"PRIu64"Hz cb=%d"
clock_set_mul_div(const char *clk, uint32_t oldmul, uint32_t mul, uint32_t olddiv, uint32_t div) "'%s', mul: %u -> %u, div: %u -> %u"

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@ -81,6 +81,10 @@ struct Clock {
void *callback_opaque;
unsigned int callback_events;
/* Ratio of the parent clock to run the child clocks at */
uint32_t multiplier;
uint32_t divider;
/* Clocks are organized in a clock tree */
Clock *source;
QLIST_HEAD(, Clock) children;
@ -350,4 +354,29 @@ static inline bool clock_is_enabled(const Clock *clk)
*/
char *clock_display_freq(Clock *clk);
/**
* clock_set_mul_div: set multiplier/divider for child clocks
* @clk: clock
* @multiplier: multiplier value
* @divider: divider value
*
* By default, a Clock's children will all run with the same period
* as their parent. This function allows you to adjust the multiplier
* and divider used to derive the child clock frequency.
* For example, setting a multiplier of 2 and a divider of 3
* will run child clocks with a period 2/3 of the parent clock,
* so if the parent clock is an 8MHz clock the children will
* be 12MHz.
*
* Setting the multiplier to 0 will stop the child clocks.
* Setting the divider to 0 is a programming error (diagnosed with
* an assertion failure).
* Setting a multiplier value that results in the child period
* overflowing is not diagnosed.
*
* Note that this function does not call clock_propagate(); the
* caller should do that if necessary.
*/
void clock_set_mul_div(Clock *clk, uint32_t multiplier, uint32_t divider);
#endif /* QEMU_HW_CLOCK_H */