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由 Andrew Halaney 提交于
For RPMH regulators it doesn't make sense to indicate regulator-allow-set-load without saying what modes you can switch to, so be sure to indicate a dependency on regulator-allowed-modes. In general this is true for any regulators that are setting modes instead of setting a load directly, for example RPMH regulators. A counter example would be RPM based regulators, which set a load change directly instead of a mode change. In the RPM case regulator-allow-set-load alone is sufficient to describe the regulator (the regulator can change its output current, here's the new load), but in the RPMH case what valid operating modes exist must also be stated to properly describe the regulator (the new load is this, what is the optimum mode for this regulator with that load, let's change to that mode now). With this in place devicetree validation can catch issues like this: /mnt/extrassd/git/linux-next/arch/arm64/boot/dts/qcom/sm8350-hdk.dtb: pm8350-rpmh-regulators: ldo5: 'regulator-allowed-modes' is a dependency of 'regulator-allow-set-load' From schema: /mnt/extrassd/git/linux-next/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/regulator/qcom,rpmh-regulator.yaml Where the RPMH regulator hardware is described as being settable, but there are no modes described to set it to! Suggested-by: NJohan Hovold <johan+kernel@kernel.org> Reviewed-by: NJohan Hovold <johan+kernel@kernel.org> Reviewed-by: NDouglas Anderson <dianders@chromium.org> Signed-off-by: NAndrew Halaney <ahalaney@redhat.com> Acked-by: NKrzysztof Kozlowski <krzysztof.kozlowski@linaro.org> Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/20220907204924.173030-1-ahalaney@redhat.comSigned-off-by: NMark Brown <broonie@kernel.org>
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