timer: Tidy up use of notrace

Tracing is typically enabled by the time driver model starts up, so there
is no point in adding a 'notrace' to the timer-init function. However,
once the driver model timer is enabled, we do need to be able to access
the timer's private data when reading the timer, so add it to the core
function needed for that.

Update the function's documentation while we are here.

Signed-off-by: Simon Glass <sjg@chromium.org>
This commit is contained in:
Simon Glass 2023-01-15 14:15:42 -07:00 committed by Tom Rini
parent c38a21d719
commit 4aa5053da5
3 changed files with 12 additions and 6 deletions

View file

@ -654,7 +654,8 @@ void *dev_get_priv(const struct udevice *dev)
return dm_priv_to_rw(dev->priv_);
}
void *dev_get_uclass_priv(const struct udevice *dev)
/* notrace is needed as this is called by timer_get_rate() */
notrace void *dev_get_uclass_priv(const struct udevice *dev)
{
if (!dev) {
dm_warn("%s: null device\n", __func__);

View file

@ -136,7 +136,7 @@ u64 timer_conv_64(u32 count)
return ((u64)gd->timebase_h << 32) | gd->timebase_l;
}
int notrace dm_timer_init(void)
int dm_timer_init(void)
{
struct udevice *dev = NULL;
__maybe_unused ofnode node;

View file

@ -9,11 +9,16 @@
#define timer_get_ops(dev) ((struct timer_ops *)(dev)->driver->ops)
/**
* dm_timer_init() - initialize a timer for time keeping. On success
* initializes gd->timer so that lib/timer can use it for future
* referrence.
* dm_timer_init() - set up a timer for time keeping
*
* Return: 0 on success or error number
* Sets up gd->timer if the device is not already bound, making sure it is
* probed and ready for use
*
* On success, inits gd->timer so that lib/timer can use it for future reference
*
* Returns: 0 on success, -EAGAIN if driver model is not ready yet, -ENODEV if
* no timer could be found, other error if the timer could not be bound or
* probed
*/
int dm_timer_init(void);