Commit Graph

154 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Varun Wadekar b47d97b395 Tegra186: power on/off secondary CPUs
This patch add code to power on/off the secondary CPUs on the Tegra186
chip. The MCE block is the actual hardware that takes care of the
power on/off sequence. We pass the constructed CPU #, depending on the
MIDR_IMPL field, to the MCE CPU handlers.

This patch also programs the reset vector addresses to allow the
CPUs to power on through the monitor and then jump to the linux
world.

Change-Id: Idc164586cda91c2009d66f3e09bf4464de9662db
Signed-off-by: Varun Wadekar <vwadekar@nvidia.com>
2017-03-20 09:12:02 -07:00
Varun Wadekar bb844c1f0d Tegra186: SiP calls to interact with the MCE driver
This patch adds the new SiP SMC calls to allow the NS world to
interact with the MCE hardware block on Tegra186 chips.

Change-Id: I79c6b9f76d68a87abd57a940613ec070562d2eac
Signed-off-by: Varun Wadekar <vwadekar@nvidia.com>
2017-03-20 09:10:00 -07:00
Varun Wadekar 7808b06b99 Tegra186: mce: driver for the CPU complex power manager block
The CPU Complex (CCPLEX) Power Manager (Denver MCE, or DMCE) is an
offload engine for BPMP to do voltage related sequencing and for
hardware requests to be handled in a better latency than BPMP-firmware.

There are two interfaces to the MCEs - Abstract Request Interface (ARI)
and the traditional NVGINDEX/NVGDATA interface.

MCE supports various commands which can be used by CPUs - ARM as well
as Denver, for power management and reset functionality. Since the
linux kernel is the master for all these scenarios, each MCE command
can be issued by a corresponding SMC. These SMCs have been moved to
SiP SMC space as they are specific to the Tegra186 SoC.

Change-Id: I67bee83d2289a8ab63bc5556e5744e5043803e51
Signed-off-by: Varun Wadekar <vwadekar@nvidia.com>

Signed-off-by: Varun Wadekar <vwadekar@nvidia.com>
2017-03-20 09:09:36 -07:00
Varun Wadekar 3cf3183fc2 Tegra186: platform support for Tegra "T186" SoC
Tegra186 is the newest SoC in the Tegra family which consists
of two CPU clusters - Denver and A57. The Denver cluster hosts
two next gen Denver15 CPUs while the A57 cluster hosts four ARM
Cortex-A57 CPUs. Unlike previous Tegra generations, all the six
cores on this SoC would be available to the system at the same
time and individual clusters can be powered down to conserve
power.

Change-Id: Id0c9919dbf5186d2938603e0b11e821b5892985e
Signed-off-by: Wayne Lin <wlin@nvidia.com>
Signed-off-by: Varun Wadekar <vwadekar@nvidia.com>
2017-03-20 08:58:58 -07:00