regulator: core: Sleep (not delay) in set_voltage()
These delays can be relatively large (e.g., hundreds of microseconds to several milliseconds on RK3399 Gru systems). Per Documentation/timers/timers-howto.rst, that should usually use a sleeping delay. Let's use the existing regulator delay helper to handle both large and small delays appropriately. This avoids burning a bunch of CPU time and hurting scheduling latencies when hitting regulators a lot (e.g., during cpufreq). The sleep vs. delay issue choice has been made differently over time -- early versions of RK3399 Gru PWM-regulator support used usleep_range() in pwm-regulator.c. More of this got moved into the regulator core, in commits like: 73e705bf81ce regulator: core: Add set_voltage_time op At the same time, the sleep turned into a delay. It's OK to sleep in _regulator_do_set_voltage(), as we aren't in an atomic context. (All our callers grab various mutexes already.) I avoid using fsleep() because it uses a usleep_range() of [N to N*2], and usleep_range() very commonly biases to the high end of the range. We don't want to double the expected delay, especially for long delays. Signed-off-by: Brian Norris <briannorris@chromium.org> Reviewed-by: Matthias Kaehlcke <mka@chromium.org> Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/20220420141511.v2.2.If0fc61a894f537b052ca41572aff098cf8e7e673@changeid Signed-off-by: Mark Brown <broonie@kernel.org>
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@ -3566,12 +3566,7 @@ static int _regulator_do_set_voltage(struct regulator_dev *rdev,
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}
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/* Insert any necessary delays */
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if (delay >= 1000) {
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mdelay(delay / 1000);
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udelay(delay % 1000);
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} else if (delay) {
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udelay(delay);
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}
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_regulator_delay_helper(delay);
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if (best_val >= 0) {
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unsigned long data = best_val;
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