Hi Rob, On Tue, May 31, 2016 at 10:35 PM, Rob Herring <robh@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > On Tue, May 31, 2016 at 2:35 AM, Chanwoo Choi <cw00.choi@xxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: >> Hi Rob, >> >> On 2016년 05월 31일 15:44, Chanwoo Choi wrote: >>> On 2016년 05월 28일 00:29, Rob Herring wrote: >>>> On Thu, May 26, 2016 at 05:17:45PM +0530, Venkat Reddy Talla wrote: >>>>> Add the support for Device tree bindings of extcon-gpio driver. >>>>> The extcon-gpio device tree node must include the both 'extcon-id' and >>>>> 'gpios' property. >>>> >>>> I think extcon bindings are a mess in general... >>>> >>>>> For example: >>>>> usb_cable: extcon-gpio-0 { >>>>> compatible = "extcon-gpio"; >>>>> extcon-id = <EXTCON_USB>; >>>>> gpios = <&gpio6 1 GPIO_ACTIVE_HIGH>; >>>>> } >>>>> ta_cable: extcon-gpio-1 { >>>>> compatible = "extcon-gpio"; >>>>> extcon-id = <EXTCON_CHG_USB_DCP>; >>>>> gpios = <&gpio3 2 GPIO_ACTIVE_LOW>; >>>>> debounce-ms = <50>; /* 50 millisecond */ >>>>> wakeup-source; >>>>> } >>>> >>>> This is all 1 logical connector, the USB connector. Why are you >>>> describing cables? Those are not part of the h/w and are dynamic. >>>> Describe this as a connector which is one thing (i.e. node). Use a >>>> compatible string that reflects the type of connector >>>> (usb-microab-connector), not the driver you want to use. Then define >>>> GPIO lines needed to provide state information like VBus, ID, charger >>>> modes and control lines like soft connect (D+ pullup enable), VBus >>>> enable, etc. >>> >>> You're right. The extcon-gpio driver will not use the "extcon-gpio" raw compatible. >>> As you commented[1], the each connector will have the unique name to use the extcon-gpio.c driver. >>> [1] https://lkml.org/lkml/2015/10/21/906 >>> >>> >>> For example, >>> The extcon-gpio.c driver may have the different name including the h/w information >>> according to the kind of external connector. >>> >>> static const struct of_device_id gpio_extcon_of_match[] = { >>> { >>> .compatible = "extcon-chg-sdp", /* SDP charger connector */ >>> .data = EXTCON_CHG_SDP_DATA, >>> }, { >>> .compatible = "extcon-chg-dcp", /* DCP charger connector */ >>> .data = EXTCON_CHG_DCP_DATA, >>> }, { >>> .compatible = "extcon-jack-microphone", /* Microphone jack connector */ >>> .data = EXTCON_JACK_MICROPHONE_DATA, >>> }, { >>> .compatible = "extcon-disp-hdmi", /* HDMI connector*/ >>> .data = EXTCON_DISP_HDMI_DATA, >>> }, >>> ...... >>> }; >> >> I reply it again. >> >> The extcon-gpio.c is very similar with existing gpio_keys.c driver[1] >> [1] drivers/input/keyboard/gpio_keys.c > > There is a big difference in that each gpio-key is independent. The > only state is pressed or not. A USB connector has multiple pieces of > state information. You may be treating them independently, but I don't > think they should be. I think that is it not different because the EXTCON can only notify the whether external connector is attached or detached such as gpio-key (pressed or not). EXTCON don't handle the any additional state except for attached or detached. > >> The gpio_keys.c driver use the following style to support the device-tree. >> It use the "gpio-keys" compatible and this dt node include the specific >> 'key code' such as 'extcon-id = <EXTCON_CHG_USB_DCP>;' > > This is state information about what is currently attached. The > analogy with gpio-keys would be multiple key codes on one gpio which > would be broken... I compared between 'gpis-keys' and ' extcon-gpio' driver as following: name | gpio-keys | extcon-gpio --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- gpio | gpios = <> | extcon-gpio = <> --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- type | linux,code = <> | extcon-id = <> --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- key & | KEY_POWER | EXTCON_USB extcon id | KEY_VOLUME_UP | EXTCON_CHG_USB_SDP | KEY_VOLUME_DOWN | EXTCON_JACK_MICROPHONE | etc | etc --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- state | pressed or not | attached or detached --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- > >> >> gpio_keys { >> compatible = "gpio-keys"; >> >> power_key { >> gpios = <&gpx2 7 GPIO_ACTIVE_LOW>; >> linux,code = <KEY_POWER>; >> label = "power key"; >> debounce-interval = <10>; >> wakeup-source; >> }; >> }; >> >> If the extcon-gpio.c driver should have the separate compatible according to >> the kind of external connector, the list of compatible name of extcon-gpio.c driver >> will be increased when new external connector is attached. > > So? Different h/w needs different compatible strings. > > But again, you are mixing describing the connector (only what is > soldered on a board) and state information (what is attached). Do not > put state information into DT (describe the gpio signals or chip that > provides the state information). > >> The extcon-gpio.c driver can separate the kind of external connector >> by using the 'extcon-id' property. > > This use of DT is just broken. Come up with another way. > > Rob Thanks, Chanwoo Choi -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe devicetree" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html