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[v9,0/8] Introduce on-chip interconnect API

Message ID 20180831140151.13972-1-georgi.djakov@linaro.org (mailing list archive)
Headers show
Series Introduce on-chip interconnect API | expand

Message

Georgi Djakov Aug. 31, 2018, 2:01 p.m. UTC
Modern SoCs have multiple processors and various dedicated cores (video, gpu,
graphics, modem). These cores are talking to each other and can generate a
lot of data flowing through the on-chip interconnects. These interconnect
buses could form different topologies such as crossbar, point to point buses,
hierarchical buses or use the network-on-chip concept.

These buses have been sized usually to handle use cases with high data
throughput but it is not necessary all the time and consume a lot of power.
Furthermore, the priority between masters can vary depending on the running
use case like video playback or CPU intensive tasks.

Having an API to control the requirement of the system in terms of bandwidth
and QoS, so we can adapt the interconnect configuration to match those by
scaling the frequencies, setting link priority and tuning QoS parameters.
This configuration can be a static, one-time operation done at boot for some
platforms or a dynamic set of operations that happen at run-time.

This patchset introduce a new API to get the requirement and configure the
interconnect buses across the entire chipset to fit with the current demand.
The API is NOT for changing the performance of the endpoint devices, but only
the interconnect path in between them.

The API is using a consumer/provider-based model, where the providers are
the interconnect buses and the consumers could be various drivers.
The consumers request interconnect resources (path) to an endpoint and set
the desired constraints on this data flow path. The provider(s) receive
requests from consumers and aggregate these requests for all master-slave
pairs on that path. Then the providers configure each participating in the
topology node according to the requested data flow path, physical links and
constraints. The topology could be complicated and multi-tiered and is SoC
specific.

Below is a simplified diagram of a real-world SoC topology. The interconnect
providers are the NoCs.

+----------------+    +----------------+
| HW Accelerator |--->|      M NoC     |<---------------+
+----------------+    +----------------+                |
                        |      |                    +------------+
 +-----+  +-------------+      V       +------+     |            |
 | DDR |  |                +--------+  | PCIe |     |            |
 +-----+  |                | Slaves |  +------+     |            |
   ^ ^    |                +--------+     |         |   C NoC    |
   | |    V                               V         |            |
+------------------+   +------------------------+   |            |   +-----+
|                  |-->|                        |-->|            |-->| CPU |
|                  |-->|                        |<--|            |   +-----+
|     Mem NoC      |   |         S NoC          |   +------------+
|                  |<--|                        |---------+    |
|                  |<--|                        |<------+ |    |   +--------+
+------------------+   +------------------------+       | |    +-->| Slaves |
  ^  ^    ^    ^          ^                             | |        +--------+
  |  |    |    |          |                             | V
+------+  |  +-----+   +-----+  +---------+   +----------------+   +--------+
| CPUs |  |  | GPU |   | DSP |  | Masters |-->|       P NoC    |-->| Slaves |
+------+  |  +-----+   +-----+  +---------+   +----------------+   +--------+
          |
      +-------+
      | Modem |
      +-------+

TODO:
* Create icc_set_extended() to handle parameters such as latency and other
  QoS values.
* Convert from using global node identifiers to local per provider ids.
* Cache the path between the nodes instead of walking the graph on each get().
* Sync interconnect requests with the idle state of the device.

Changes since patchset v8 (https://lkml.org/lkml/2018/8/10/387)
* Fixed the names of the files when built as modules.
* Corrected some typos in comments.

Changes since patchset v7 (https://lkml.org/lkml/2018/7/31/647)
* Addressed comments on kernel-doc and grammar. (Randy)
* Picked Reviewed-by: Evan
* Squashed consumer and provider DT bindings into single patch. (Rob)
* Cleaned-up msm8916 DT bindings docs by removing unused port ids.
* Updated documentation for the cases when NULL is returned. (Saravana)
* New patch to add myself as maintainer.

Changes since patchset v6 (https://lkml.org/lkml/2018/7/9/698)
* [patches 1,6]: Move the aggregation within the provider from the framework to
  the platform driver's set() callback, as the aggregation point could be SoC
  specific.
* [patch 1]: Include missing header, reset state only of the traversed nodes,
  move more code into path_init(), add more asserts, move misplaced mutex,
  simplify icc_link_destroy() (Evan)
* [patch 1]: Fix the order of requests to go from source to destination. (Alex)
* [patch 7]: Use better wording in the documentation. (Evan)
* [patch 6]: Reorder struct members, sort nodes alphabetically, improve naming
  of variables , add missing clk_disable_unprepare() in error paths. (Matthias)
* [patch 6]: Remove redundant NULL pointer check in msm8916 driver. (Alex)
* [patch 6]: Add missing depend on QCOM_SMD_RPM in Kconfig. (Evan)
* [patch 3]: Don't check for errors on debugfs calls, remove debugfs directory
  when module is unloaded (Greg)

Changes since patchset v5 (https://lkml.org/lkml/2018/6/20/453)
* Fix the modular build, make rpm-smd driver a module.
* Optimize locking and move to higher level. (Evan)
* Code cleanups. Fix typos. (Evan, Matthias)
* Add the source node to the path. (Evan)
* Rename path_allocate() to path_init() with minor refactoring. (Evan)
* Rename *_remove() functions to *_destroy().
* Return fixed errors in icc_link_destroy(). (Evan)
* Fix krealloc() usage in icc_link_destroy(). (Evan)
* Add missing kfree() in icc_node_create(). (Matthias)
* Make icc_node_add() return void. (Matthias)
* Change mutex_init to mutex_lock in icc_provider_add(). (Matthias)
* Add new icc_node_del() function to delete nodes from provider.
* Fix the header guard to reflect the path in smd-rpm.h. (Evan)
* Check for errors returned by qcom_icc_rpm_smd_send(). (Evan)
* Propagate the error of icc_provider_del(). (Evan)

Changes since patchset v4 (https://lkml.org/lkml/2018/3/9/856)
* Simplified locking by using a single global mutex. (Evan)
* Changed the aggregation function interface.
* Implemented functions for node, link, provider removal. (Evan)
* Naming changes on variables and functions, removed redundant code. (Evan)
* Fixes and clarifications in the docs. (Matthias, Evan, Amit, Alexandre)
* Removed mandatory reg DT property, made interconnect-names optional. (Bjorn)
* Made interconnect-cells property required to align with other bindings. (Neil)
* Moved msm8916 specific bindings into a separate file and patch. (Bjorn)
* Use the names, instead of the hardcoded ids for topology. (Matthias)
* Init the node before creating the links. (Evan)
* Added icc_units_to_bps macro. (Amit)

Changes since patchset v3 (https://lkml.org/lkml/2017/9/8/544)
* Refactored the constraints aggregation.
* Use the IDR API.
* Split the provider and consumer bindings into separate patches and propose
  new bindings for consumers, which allows to specify the local source port.
* Adopted the icc_ prefix for API functions.
* Introduced separate API functions for creating interconnect nodes and links.
* Added DT lookup support in addition to platform data.
* Dropped the event tracing patch for now.
* Added a patch to provide summary via debugfs.
* Use macro for the list of topology definitions in the platform driver.
* Various minor changes.

Changes since patchset v2 (https://lkml.org/lkml/2017/7/20/825)
* Split the aggregation into per node and per provider. Cache the
  aggregated values.
* Various small refactorings and cleanups in the framework.
* Added a patch introducing basic tracepoint support for monitoring
  the time required to update the interconnect nodes.

Changes since patchset v1 (https://lkml.org/lkml/2017/6/27/890)
* Updates in the documentation.
* Changes in request aggregation, locking.
* Dropped the aggregate() callback and use the default as it currently
  sufficient for the single vendor driver. Will add it later when needed.
* Dropped the dt-bindings draft patch for now.

Changes since RFC v2 (https://lkml.org/lkml/2017/6/12/316)
* Converted documentation to rst format.
* Fixed an incorrect call to mutex_lock. Renamed max_bw to peak_bw.

Changes since RFC v1 (https://lkml.org/lkml/2017/5/15/605)
* Refactored code into shorter functions.
* Added a new aggregate() API function.
* Rearranged some structs to reduce padding bytes.

Changes since RFC v0 (https://lkml.org/lkml/2017/3/1/599)
* Removed DT support and added optional Patch 3 with new bindings proposal.
* Converted the topology into internal driver data.
* Made the framework modular.
* interconnect_get() now takes (src and dst ports as arguments).
* Removed public declarations of some structs.
* Now passing prev/next nodes to the vendor driver.
* Properly remove requests on _put().
* Added refcounting.
* Updated documentation.
* Changed struct interconnect_path to use array instead of linked list.

Georgi Djakov (8):
  interconnect: Add generic on-chip interconnect API
  dt-bindings: Introduce interconnect binding
  interconnect: Allow endpoints translation via DT
  interconnect: Add debugfs support
  interconnect: qcom: Add RPM communication
  dt-bindings: interconnect: Document qcom,msm8916 NoC bindings
  interconnect: qcom: Add msm8916 interconnect provider driver
  MAINTAINERS: add a maintainer for the interconnect API

 .../bindings/interconnect/interconnect.txt    |  60 ++
 .../bindings/interconnect/qcom-msm8916.txt    |  41 +
 .../bindings/interconnect/qcom-smd.txt        |  32 +
 Documentation/interconnect/interconnect.rst   |  94 +++
 MAINTAINERS                                   |  10 +
 drivers/Kconfig                               |   2 +
 drivers/Makefile                              |   1 +
 drivers/interconnect/Kconfig                  |  15 +
 drivers/interconnect/Makefile                 |   6 +
 drivers/interconnect/core.c                   | 729 ++++++++++++++++++
 drivers/interconnect/qcom/Kconfig             |  22 +
 drivers/interconnect/qcom/Makefile            |   7 +
 drivers/interconnect/qcom/msm8916.c           | 510 ++++++++++++
 drivers/interconnect/qcom/smd-rpm.c           |  91 +++
 drivers/interconnect/qcom/smd-rpm.h           |  15 +
 include/dt-bindings/interconnect/qcom.h       |  98 +++
 include/linux/interconnect-provider.h         | 125 +++
 include/linux/interconnect.h                  |  49 ++
 18 files changed, 1907 insertions(+)
 create mode 100644 Documentation/devicetree/bindings/interconnect/interconnect.txt
 create mode 100644 Documentation/devicetree/bindings/interconnect/qcom-msm8916.txt
 create mode 100644 Documentation/devicetree/bindings/interconnect/qcom-smd.txt
 create mode 100644 Documentation/interconnect/interconnect.rst
 create mode 100644 drivers/interconnect/Kconfig
 create mode 100644 drivers/interconnect/Makefile
 create mode 100644 drivers/interconnect/core.c
 create mode 100644 drivers/interconnect/qcom/Kconfig
 create mode 100644 drivers/interconnect/qcom/Makefile
 create mode 100644 drivers/interconnect/qcom/msm8916.c
 create mode 100644 drivers/interconnect/qcom/smd-rpm.c
 create mode 100644 drivers/interconnect/qcom/smd-rpm.h
 create mode 100644 include/dt-bindings/interconnect/qcom.h
 create mode 100644 include/linux/interconnect-provider.h
 create mode 100644 include/linux/interconnect.h

Comments

Amit Kucheria Sept. 4, 2018, 10:24 a.m. UTC | #1
Hi Georgi,

I'm currently reviewing this patchset (long overdue), but considering
that we haven't added any major new features to the framework for the
last couple of revisions, can you get this patchset merged into
linux-next to see how things shake out there? We've had this merged
branch merged into a CI build on kernelci for a while now w/o any
major incident so we should increase its exposure.

You could ask Stephen Rothwell if he'll accept the a branch directly
from you or he needs an upstream maintainer (GregKH?) to carry it.

Regard,
Amit

On Fri, Aug 31, 2018 at 7:31 PM, Georgi Djakov <georgi.djakov@linaro.org> wrote:
> Modern SoCs have multiple processors and various dedicated cores (video, gpu,
> graphics, modem). These cores are talking to each other and can generate a
> lot of data flowing through the on-chip interconnects. These interconnect
> buses could form different topologies such as crossbar, point to point buses,
> hierarchical buses or use the network-on-chip concept.
>
> These buses have been sized usually to handle use cases with high data
> throughput but it is not necessary all the time and consume a lot of power.
> Furthermore, the priority between masters can vary depending on the running
> use case like video playback or CPU intensive tasks.
>
> Having an API to control the requirement of the system in terms of bandwidth
> and QoS, so we can adapt the interconnect configuration to match those by
> scaling the frequencies, setting link priority and tuning QoS parameters.
> This configuration can be a static, one-time operation done at boot for some
> platforms or a dynamic set of operations that happen at run-time.
>
> This patchset introduce a new API to get the requirement and configure the
> interconnect buses across the entire chipset to fit with the current demand.
> The API is NOT for changing the performance of the endpoint devices, but only
> the interconnect path in between them.
>
> The API is using a consumer/provider-based model, where the providers are
> the interconnect buses and the consumers could be various drivers.
> The consumers request interconnect resources (path) to an endpoint and set
> the desired constraints on this data flow path. The provider(s) receive
> requests from consumers and aggregate these requests for all master-slave
> pairs on that path. Then the providers configure each participating in the
> topology node according to the requested data flow path, physical links and
> constraints. The topology could be complicated and multi-tiered and is SoC
> specific.
>
> Below is a simplified diagram of a real-world SoC topology. The interconnect
> providers are the NoCs.
>
> +----------------+    +----------------+
> | HW Accelerator |--->|      M NoC     |<---------------+
> +----------------+    +----------------+                |
>                         |      |                    +------------+
>  +-----+  +-------------+      V       +------+     |            |
>  | DDR |  |                +--------+  | PCIe |     |            |
>  +-----+  |                | Slaves |  +------+     |            |
>    ^ ^    |                +--------+     |         |   C NoC    |
>    | |    V                               V         |            |
> +------------------+   +------------------------+   |            |   +-----+
> |                  |-->|                        |-->|            |-->| CPU |
> |                  |-->|                        |<--|            |   +-----+
> |     Mem NoC      |   |         S NoC          |   +------------+
> |                  |<--|                        |---------+    |
> |                  |<--|                        |<------+ |    |   +--------+
> +------------------+   +------------------------+       | |    +-->| Slaves |
>   ^  ^    ^    ^          ^                             | |        +--------+
>   |  |    |    |          |                             | V
> +------+  |  +-----+   +-----+  +---------+   +----------------+   +--------+
> | CPUs |  |  | GPU |   | DSP |  | Masters |-->|       P NoC    |-->| Slaves |
> +------+  |  +-----+   +-----+  +---------+   +----------------+   +--------+
>           |
>       +-------+
>       | Modem |
>       +-------+
>
> TODO:
> * Create icc_set_extended() to handle parameters such as latency and other
>   QoS values.
> * Convert from using global node identifiers to local per provider ids.
> * Cache the path between the nodes instead of walking the graph on each get().
> * Sync interconnect requests with the idle state of the device.
>
> Changes since patchset v8 (https://lkml.org/lkml/2018/8/10/387)
> * Fixed the names of the files when built as modules.
> * Corrected some typos in comments.
>
> Changes since patchset v7 (https://lkml.org/lkml/2018/7/31/647)
> * Addressed comments on kernel-doc and grammar. (Randy)
> * Picked Reviewed-by: Evan
> * Squashed consumer and provider DT bindings into single patch. (Rob)
> * Cleaned-up msm8916 DT bindings docs by removing unused port ids.
> * Updated documentation for the cases when NULL is returned. (Saravana)
> * New patch to add myself as maintainer.
>
> Changes since patchset v6 (https://lkml.org/lkml/2018/7/9/698)
> * [patches 1,6]: Move the aggregation within the provider from the framework to
>   the platform driver's set() callback, as the aggregation point could be SoC
>   specific.
> * [patch 1]: Include missing header, reset state only of the traversed nodes,
>   move more code into path_init(), add more asserts, move misplaced mutex,
>   simplify icc_link_destroy() (Evan)
> * [patch 1]: Fix the order of requests to go from source to destination. (Alex)
> * [patch 7]: Use better wording in the documentation. (Evan)
> * [patch 6]: Reorder struct members, sort nodes alphabetically, improve naming
>   of variables , add missing clk_disable_unprepare() in error paths. (Matthias)
> * [patch 6]: Remove redundant NULL pointer check in msm8916 driver. (Alex)
> * [patch 6]: Add missing depend on QCOM_SMD_RPM in Kconfig. (Evan)
> * [patch 3]: Don't check for errors on debugfs calls, remove debugfs directory
>   when module is unloaded (Greg)
>
> Changes since patchset v5 (https://lkml.org/lkml/2018/6/20/453)
> * Fix the modular build, make rpm-smd driver a module.
> * Optimize locking and move to higher level. (Evan)
> * Code cleanups. Fix typos. (Evan, Matthias)
> * Add the source node to the path. (Evan)
> * Rename path_allocate() to path_init() with minor refactoring. (Evan)
> * Rename *_remove() functions to *_destroy().
> * Return fixed errors in icc_link_destroy(). (Evan)
> * Fix krealloc() usage in icc_link_destroy(). (Evan)
> * Add missing kfree() in icc_node_create(). (Matthias)
> * Make icc_node_add() return void. (Matthias)
> * Change mutex_init to mutex_lock in icc_provider_add(). (Matthias)
> * Add new icc_node_del() function to delete nodes from provider.
> * Fix the header guard to reflect the path in smd-rpm.h. (Evan)
> * Check for errors returned by qcom_icc_rpm_smd_send(). (Evan)
> * Propagate the error of icc_provider_del(). (Evan)
>
> Changes since patchset v4 (https://lkml.org/lkml/2018/3/9/856)
> * Simplified locking by using a single global mutex. (Evan)
> * Changed the aggregation function interface.
> * Implemented functions for node, link, provider removal. (Evan)
> * Naming changes on variables and functions, removed redundant code. (Evan)
> * Fixes and clarifications in the docs. (Matthias, Evan, Amit, Alexandre)
> * Removed mandatory reg DT property, made interconnect-names optional. (Bjorn)
> * Made interconnect-cells property required to align with other bindings. (Neil)
> * Moved msm8916 specific bindings into a separate file and patch. (Bjorn)
> * Use the names, instead of the hardcoded ids for topology. (Matthias)
> * Init the node before creating the links. (Evan)
> * Added icc_units_to_bps macro. (Amit)
>
> Changes since patchset v3 (https://lkml.org/lkml/2017/9/8/544)
> * Refactored the constraints aggregation.
> * Use the IDR API.
> * Split the provider and consumer bindings into separate patches and propose
>   new bindings for consumers, which allows to specify the local source port.
> * Adopted the icc_ prefix for API functions.
> * Introduced separate API functions for creating interconnect nodes and links.
> * Added DT lookup support in addition to platform data.
> * Dropped the event tracing patch for now.
> * Added a patch to provide summary via debugfs.
> * Use macro for the list of topology definitions in the platform driver.
> * Various minor changes.
>
> Changes since patchset v2 (https://lkml.org/lkml/2017/7/20/825)
> * Split the aggregation into per node and per provider. Cache the
>   aggregated values.
> * Various small refactorings and cleanups in the framework.
> * Added a patch introducing basic tracepoint support for monitoring
>   the time required to update the interconnect nodes.
>
> Changes since patchset v1 (https://lkml.org/lkml/2017/6/27/890)
> * Updates in the documentation.
> * Changes in request aggregation, locking.
> * Dropped the aggregate() callback and use the default as it currently
>   sufficient for the single vendor driver. Will add it later when needed.
> * Dropped the dt-bindings draft patch for now.
>
> Changes since RFC v2 (https://lkml.org/lkml/2017/6/12/316)
> * Converted documentation to rst format.
> * Fixed an incorrect call to mutex_lock. Renamed max_bw to peak_bw.
>
> Changes since RFC v1 (https://lkml.org/lkml/2017/5/15/605)
> * Refactored code into shorter functions.
> * Added a new aggregate() API function.
> * Rearranged some structs to reduce padding bytes.
>
> Changes since RFC v0 (https://lkml.org/lkml/2017/3/1/599)
> * Removed DT support and added optional Patch 3 with new bindings proposal.
> * Converted the topology into internal driver data.
> * Made the framework modular.
> * interconnect_get() now takes (src and dst ports as arguments).
> * Removed public declarations of some structs.
> * Now passing prev/next nodes to the vendor driver.
> * Properly remove requests on _put().
> * Added refcounting.
> * Updated documentation.
> * Changed struct interconnect_path to use array instead of linked list.
>
> Georgi Djakov (8):
>   interconnect: Add generic on-chip interconnect API
>   dt-bindings: Introduce interconnect binding
>   interconnect: Allow endpoints translation via DT
>   interconnect: Add debugfs support
>   interconnect: qcom: Add RPM communication
>   dt-bindings: interconnect: Document qcom,msm8916 NoC bindings
>   interconnect: qcom: Add msm8916 interconnect provider driver
>   MAINTAINERS: add a maintainer for the interconnect API
>
>  .../bindings/interconnect/interconnect.txt    |  60 ++
>  .../bindings/interconnect/qcom-msm8916.txt    |  41 +
>  .../bindings/interconnect/qcom-smd.txt        |  32 +
>  Documentation/interconnect/interconnect.rst   |  94 +++
>  MAINTAINERS                                   |  10 +
>  drivers/Kconfig                               |   2 +
>  drivers/Makefile                              |   1 +
>  drivers/interconnect/Kconfig                  |  15 +
>  drivers/interconnect/Makefile                 |   6 +
>  drivers/interconnect/core.c                   | 729 ++++++++++++++++++
>  drivers/interconnect/qcom/Kconfig             |  22 +
>  drivers/interconnect/qcom/Makefile            |   7 +
>  drivers/interconnect/qcom/msm8916.c           | 510 ++++++++++++
>  drivers/interconnect/qcom/smd-rpm.c           |  91 +++
>  drivers/interconnect/qcom/smd-rpm.h           |  15 +
>  include/dt-bindings/interconnect/qcom.h       |  98 +++
>  include/linux/interconnect-provider.h         | 125 +++
>  include/linux/interconnect.h                  |  49 ++
>  18 files changed, 1907 insertions(+)
>  create mode 100644 Documentation/devicetree/bindings/interconnect/interconnect.txt
>  create mode 100644 Documentation/devicetree/bindings/interconnect/qcom-msm8916.txt
>  create mode 100644 Documentation/devicetree/bindings/interconnect/qcom-smd.txt
>  create mode 100644 Documentation/interconnect/interconnect.rst
>  create mode 100644 drivers/interconnect/Kconfig
>  create mode 100644 drivers/interconnect/Makefile
>  create mode 100644 drivers/interconnect/core.c
>  create mode 100644 drivers/interconnect/qcom/Kconfig
>  create mode 100644 drivers/interconnect/qcom/Makefile
>  create mode 100644 drivers/interconnect/qcom/msm8916.c
>  create mode 100644 drivers/interconnect/qcom/smd-rpm.c
>  create mode 100644 drivers/interconnect/qcom/smd-rpm.h
>  create mode 100644 include/dt-bindings/interconnect/qcom.h
>  create mode 100644 include/linux/interconnect-provider.h
>  create mode 100644 include/linux/interconnect.h
>
Stephen Rothwell Sept. 4, 2018, 11:36 p.m. UTC | #2
Hi all,

On Tue, 4 Sep 2018 15:54:27 +0530 Amit Kucheria <amit.kucheria@linaro.org> wrote:
>
> I'm currently reviewing this patchset (long overdue), but considering
> that we haven't added any major new features to the framework for the
> last couple of revisions, can you get this patchset merged into
> linux-next to see how things shake out there? We've had this merged
> branch merged into a CI build on kernelci for a while now w/o any
> major incident so we should increase its exposure.
> 
> You could ask Stephen Rothwell if he'll accept the a branch directly
> from you or he needs an upstream maintainer (GregKH?) to carry it.

Since it appears to have been well reviewed and tested, I can take it
if you send me a git URL and the names of contacts in case of issues
with the branch.  Once Greg has merged it, I will try to drop it again
(unless you think there will be an ongoing reason to keep it in
linux-next separately), but a prompting email would also be nice in
case I forget.
Georgi Djakov Sept. 5, 2018, 2:50 p.m. UTC | #3
Hi Stephen,

On 09/05/2018 02:36 AM, Stephen Rothwell wrote:
> Hi all,
> 
> On Tue, 4 Sep 2018 15:54:27 +0530 Amit Kucheria <amit.kucheria@linaro.org> wrote:
>>
>> I'm currently reviewing this patchset (long overdue), but considering
>> that we haven't added any major new features to the framework for the
>> last couple of revisions, can you get this patchset merged into
>> linux-next to see how things shake out there? We've had this merged
>> branch merged into a CI build on kernelci for a while now w/o any
>> major incident so we should increase its exposure.
>>
>> You could ask Stephen Rothwell if he'll accept the a branch directly
>> from you or he needs an upstream maintainer (GregKH?) to carry it.
> 
> Since it appears to have been well reviewed and tested, I can take it
> if you send me a git URL and the names of contacts in case of issues
> with the branch.  Once Greg has merged it, I will try to drop it again
> (unless you think there will be an ongoing reason to keep it in
> linux-next separately), but a prompting email would also be nice in
> case I forget.

Thank you! Below is the git URL to pull from and you can use my e-mail
as contact for any issues.

git://git.linaro.org/people/georgi.djakov/linux.git#icc-next

I expect this to be a continuing effort with some upcoming users of this
API, so i plan to maintain this branch and occasionally put some
reviewed/tested patches to get wider integration testing. But let's see
what happens now.

In any case, if this increases your burden, feel free to drop it.

Thanks,
Georgi
Stephen Rothwell Sept. 5, 2018, 3:05 p.m. UTC | #4
Hi Georgi,

On Wed, 5 Sep 2018 17:50:28 +0300 Georgi Djakov <georgi.djakov@linaro.org> wrote:
>
> On 09/05/2018 02:36 AM, Stephen Rothwell wrote:
> > 
> > On Tue, 4 Sep 2018 15:54:27 +0530 Amit Kucheria <amit.kucheria@linaro.org> wrote:  
> >>
> >> I'm currently reviewing this patchset (long overdue), but considering
> >> that we haven't added any major new features to the framework for the
> >> last couple of revisions, can you get this patchset merged into
> >> linux-next to see how things shake out there? We've had this merged
> >> branch merged into a CI build on kernelci for a while now w/o any
> >> major incident so we should increase its exposure.
> >>
> >> You could ask Stephen Rothwell if he'll accept the a branch directly
> >> from you or he needs an upstream maintainer (GregKH?) to carry it.  
> > 
> > Since it appears to have been well reviewed and tested, I can take it
> > if you send me a git URL and the names of contacts in case of issues
> > with the branch.  Once Greg has merged it, I will try to drop it again
> > (unless you think there will be an ongoing reason to keep it in
> > linux-next separately), but a prompting email would also be nice in
> > case I forget.  
> 
> Thank you! Below is the git URL to pull from and you can use my e-mail
> as contact for any issues.
> 
> git://git.linaro.org/people/georgi.djakov/linux.git#icc-next
> 
> I expect this to be a continuing effort with some upcoming users of this
> API, so i plan to maintain this branch and occasionally put some
> reviewed/tested patches to get wider integration testing. But let's see
> what happens now.
> 
> In any case, if this increases your burden, feel free to drop it.

Added from (later) today.

Thanks for adding your subsystem tree as a participant of linux-next.  As
you may know, this is not a judgement of your code.  The purpose of
linux-next is for integration testing and to lower the impact of
conflicts between subsystems in the next merge window. 

You will need to ensure that the patches/commits in your tree/series have
been:
     * submitted under GPL v2 (or later) and include the Contributor's
        Signed-off-by,
     * posted to the relevant mailing list,
     * reviewed by you (or another maintainer of your subsystem tree),
     * successfully unit tested, and 
     * destined for the current or next Linux merge window.

Basically, this should be just what you would send to Linus (or ask him
to fetch).  It is allowed to be rebased if you deem it necessary.