Hi Paweł, On 2020-03-31 21:50, Paweł Chmiel wrote: > On Tue, 2020-03-31 at 21:29 +0200, Marek Szyprowski wrote: >> On 2020-03-31 17:29, Paweł Chmiel wrote: >>> On Tue, 2020-03-31 at 15:55 +0200, Marek Szyprowski wrote: >>>> On 2020-03-31 15:09, Paul Cercueil wrote: >>>>> Le mar. 31 mars 2020 à 7:36, Marek Szyprowski >>>>> <m.szyprowski@xxxxxxxxxxx> a écrit : >>>>>> On 2020-03-18 15:25, Paul Cercueil wrote: >>>>>>>>> + }; >>>>>>>>> + >>>>>>>>> + tsp_reg: regulator-1 { >>>>>>>>> + compatible = "regulator-fixed"; >>>>>>>>> + regulator-name = "TSP_FIXED_VOLTAGES"; >>>>>>>>> + regulator-min-microvolt = <3300000>; >>>>>>>>> + regulator-max-microvolt = <3300000>; >>>>>>>>> + gpio = <&gpl0 3 GPIO_ACTIVE_HIGH>; >>>>>>>>> + startup-delay-us = <70000>; >>>>>>>>> + enable-active-high; >>>>>>>>> + regulator-boot-on; >>>>>>>>> + regulator-always-on; >>>>>>>> always-on and boot-on should not be needed. You have a consumer >>>>>>>> for this >>>>>>>> regulator. >>>>>>> About this: the touchscreen driver does not use a regulator, so I >>>>>>> believe that's why these properties were here. >>>>>>> >>>>>>> I sent patches upstream to address the issue: >>>>>>> https://protect2.fireeye.com/url?k=e8aedc29-b53072b3-e8af5766-0cc47a336fae-759579fd576d8382&u=https://lkml.org/lkml/2020/3/15/94 >>>>>>> >>>>>>> >>>>>>> I believe this means I cannot merge the i9100 devicetree until it is >>>>>>> acked. >>>>>> One more information - similar change has been already posted, but it >>>>>> looks it got lost then: https://patchwork.kernel.org/patch/10550903/ >>>>> I was aware of this patch, but didn't know it was sent upstream. >>>>> >>>>> This other patch uses two regulators, vdd/avdd but doesn't give any >>>>> reason why. >>>>> >>>> I've checked the UniversalC210 schematic, which uses the same >>>> touchscreen chip. There are 2 supplies to the touchscreen chip: 2.8V VDD >>>> and 3.3V AVDD. Both are enabled by the same GPIO pin though. There is >>>> however no reset GPIO pin there. >>> Hi >>> Don't remember now how it worked on Galaxy S1, but it looks like it has >>> the same setup - two regulators enabled by one GPIO pin. >> It is quite common for the regulators to share the enable GPIO line, so >> this is not an issue. Regulator framework supports such configuration >> for ages. I'm curious about the reset GPIO line, which were made >> mandatory for the regulators control in your patch. I didn't find it on >> any schematic of the devices with this touch screen, but I don't have a >> schematic of the Galaxy S1. IMHO the reset signal is simply derived from >> the supply regulators with some simple circuit, but I don't have >> schematic of that part. > Hi > Regarding this change - it was suggested during review of v1 version of > those patches. It's first reply here > https://patchwork.kernel.org/patch/10524007/ Well, I know that this has been requested in v1 review, but I thought that you have tested v3 of your patch on I9000, thus I was curious about that reset GPIO line. Best regards -- Marek Szyprowski, PhD Samsung R&D Institute Poland