thermal: exynos: Reading temperature makes sense only when TMU is turned on

When thermal sensor is not yet enabled, reading temperature might return
random value. This might even result in stopping system booting when such
temperature is higher than the critical value. Fix this by checking if TMU
has been actually enabled before reading the temperature.

This change fixes booting of Exynos4210-based board with TMU enabled (for
example Samsung Trats board), which was broken since v4.4 kernel release.

Signed-off-by: Marek Szyprowski <m.szyprowski@samsung.com>
Fixes: 9e4249b403 ("thermal: exynos: Fix first temperature read after registering sensor")
CC: stable@vger.kernel.org # v4.6+
Signed-off-by: Bartlomiej Zolnierkiewicz <b.zolnierkie@samsung.com>
Signed-off-by: Eduardo Valentin <edubezval@gmail.com>
This commit is contained in:
Marek Szyprowski 2018-04-16 12:11:52 +02:00 committed by Eduardo Valentin
parent 6d08b06e67
commit 88fc6f73fd
1 changed files with 4 additions and 1 deletions

View File

@ -185,6 +185,7 @@
* @regulator: pointer to the TMU regulator structure.
* @reg_conf: pointer to structure to register with core thermal.
* @ntrip: number of supported trip points.
* @enabled: current status of TMU device
* @tmu_initialize: SoC specific TMU initialization method
* @tmu_control: SoC specific TMU control method
* @tmu_read: SoC specific TMU temperature read method
@ -205,6 +206,7 @@ struct exynos_tmu_data {
struct regulator *regulator;
struct thermal_zone_device *tzd;
unsigned int ntrip;
bool enabled;
int (*tmu_initialize)(struct platform_device *pdev);
void (*tmu_control)(struct platform_device *pdev, bool on);
@ -398,6 +400,7 @@ static void exynos_tmu_control(struct platform_device *pdev, bool on)
mutex_lock(&data->lock);
clk_enable(data->clk);
data->tmu_control(pdev, on);
data->enabled = on;
clk_disable(data->clk);
mutex_unlock(&data->lock);
}
@ -890,7 +893,7 @@ static int exynos_get_temp(void *p, int *temp)
{
struct exynos_tmu_data *data = p;
if (!data || !data->tmu_read)
if (!data || !data->tmu_read || !data->enabled)
return -EINVAL;
mutex_lock(&data->lock);