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authorPatrick Havelange2019-06-12 16:12:45 +0200
committerThierry Reding2019-06-26 11:39:16 +0200
commit3479bbd1e1f873704b11a65ab7efcfb5fd9353de (patch)
treedfb21e6f544b2d4d73321bb3f7463804293452b1 /drivers/auxdisplay
parentda9b386492f8ae81b5f544c467c336ef35d7a41e (diff)
pwm: fsl-ftm: More relaxed permissions for updating period
The Flextimer has only one period for several channels. The PWM subsystem doesn't allow to model something like that. The current implementation simply disallows changing the period once it has been set, having as a side effect that you need to enable and disable the PWM if you want to change the period. The driver should allow as much freedom as possible for configuring the period and duty cycle. Therefore, this patch reworks the code to allow the following: - period and duty_cycle can be set at will when the PWM is disabled; - when enabling a PWM, verify that the period is either not set yet, or the same as the other already enabled PWM(s), and fail if not; - allow to change the period on the fly when the PWM is the only one enabled. It also allows to have different periods configured for different PWMs. Only one period can be used at a time, thus the first PWM to be enabled will set that period, only other PWMs with that same period can be enabled at the same time. To use another PWM with another period, the enabled PWMs must be disabled first. Example scenario : echo 5000000 > pwm0/period #OK echo 1000000 > pwm0/duty_cycle #OK echo 1000000 > pwm1/period #OK echo 1000000 > pwm1/duty_cycle #OK echo 1 > pwm0/enable #OK echo 1 > pwm1/enable #FAIL (pwm0/period != pwm1/period) echo 0 > pwm0/enable #OK echo 1 > pwm1/enable #OK echo 1000000 > pwm0/period #OK echo 2000000 > pwm0/period #OK echo 1 > pwm0/enable #FAIL (pwm0/period != pwm1/period) echo 2000000 > pwm1/period #OK (pwm1 still running, changed on the fly) echo 1 > pwm0/enable #OK (now pwm0/period == pwm1/period) echo 3000000 > pwm1/period #FAIL (other PWMs running) echo 0 > pwm0/enable #OK echo 3000000 > pwm1/period #OK (only this PWM running) Adapting the code to satisfy these constraints turned up a number of additional issues with the current implementation: - the prescaler value 0 was not used (when it could have been); - when setting the period was not possible, the internal state was inconsistent; - the maximal value for configuring the period was never used; Since all of these interact with each other, rather than trying to fix each individual issue, this patch reworks how the period and duty cycle are set entirely, with the following additional improvements: - implement the new apply() method instead of the individual methods; - return the exact used period/duty_cycle values; - more coherent argument types for period, duty_cycle; Signed-off-by: Patrick Havelange <patrick.havelange@essensium.com> Signed-off-by: Thierry Reding <thierry.reding@gmail.com>
Diffstat (limited to 'drivers/auxdisplay')
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