Hi,
On 18-10-2019 20:39, John Stultz wrote:
On Fri, Oct 18, 2019 at 1:06 AM Hans de Goede <hdegoede@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
On 18-10-2019 07:55, John Stultz wrote:
On Wed, Oct 16, 2019 at 12:27 AM Hans de Goede <hdegoede@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
Look at the tcpm_set_vbus implementation in drivers/usb/typec/tcpm/fusb302.c
you need to do something similar in your Type-C controller driver and
export the GPIO as as a gpio-controlled regulator and tie the regulator to
the connector.
Thanks for the suggestion, I really appreciate it! One more question
though, since I'm using the tcpci_rt1711h driver, which re-uses the
somewhat sparse tcpci.c implementation, would you recommend trying to
add generic regulator support to the tcpci code or trying to extend
the implementation somehow allow the tcpci_rt1711h driver replace just
the set_vbus function?
I have the feeling that this is more of a question for Heikki.
My first instinct is: if you are using tcpci can't you put all
the hacks you need for the usb connection shared between hub
and type-c in your firmware ?
I appreciate the suggestion, but I'm not aware of any USB firmware for
the board, nor do I think I have any such source. :(
My bad, I was under the impression that tcpci was a firmware interface,
but it is not (I was confusing it with ucsi).
Looking at drivers/usb/typec/tcpm/tcpci.c: tcpci_set_vconn I see that
there is a data struct with vendor specific callbacks and that the
drivers/usb/typec/tcpm/tcpci_rt1711h.c implements that.
So you may want something similar here. But things are tricky here,
because when nothing is connected you want to provide Vbus for
the USB-A ports, which means that if someone then connects a
USB-A to C cable to connect the board to a PC (switching the port
to device mode) there will be a time when both sides are supplying
5V if I remember the schedule correctly.
I think that the original hack might not be that bad, the whole hw
design seems so, erm, broken, that you probably cannot do proper
roleswapping anyways. So just tying Vbus to host mode might be
fine, the question then becomes again how can some other piece
of code listen to the role-switch events...
Regards,
Hans