On Thu, Mar 11, 2021 at 3:58 PM Rob Herring <robh+dt@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > On Wed, Mar 10, 2021 at 6:09 PM Linus Walleij <linus.walleij@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > On Wed, Mar 10, 2021 at 6:51 PM Rob Herring <robh+dt@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > > > > > +static const struct of_device_id bcm63xx_gpio_of_match[] = { > > > > + { .compatible = "brcm,bcm6318-gpio", }, > > > > + { .compatible = "brcm,bcm6328-gpio", }, > > > > + { .compatible = "brcm,bcm6358-gpio", }, > > > > + { .compatible = "brcm,bcm6362-gpio", }, > > > > + { .compatible = "brcm,bcm6368-gpio", }, > > > > + { .compatible = "brcm,bcm63268-gpio", }, > > > > > > All these would be moved to gpio-mmio.c (or maybe that can have a > > > fallback compatible?). > > > > This is gpio-regmap.c and it can only be used as a library > > by a certain driver. gpio-mmio.c can be used stand-alone > > for certain really simple hardware (though most use that > > as a library as well). > > I don't really care which one is used, but the problem is that this > choice is leaking into the binding design. Aha I guess I misunderstood your comment. >The primary problem here is > once someone uses regmap, then they think they must have a syscon and > can abandon using 'reg' and normal address properties as Linux happens > to not use them (currently). I think we really need some better regmap > vs. mmio handling to eliminate this duplication of foo-mmio and > foo-regmap drivers and difference in binding design. Not sure exactly > what that looks like, but basically some sort of 'reg' property to > regmap creation. I see the problem. Yeah we should try to be more strict around these things. To me there are syscons and "other regmaps", where syscon is a real hurdle of registers while "other regmaps" are just regmaps by convenience. Documentation/devicetree/bindings/mfd/syscon.yaml describes what a syscon really is so if everyone could just read the documentation that would be great ... > Given we already have a Broadcom GPIO binding for what looks to be > similar to this one, I'm left wondering what's the real difference > here? Which one is similar? I can take a look. We currently have four Broadcom GPIO bindings, which are stand alone GPIO blocks and eight Broadcom pin controllers that all do GPIO as well. This family of pin controllers are (as per subject) is the bcm63xx series which is a MIPS-based family of SoCs found in routers, top bindings in Documentation/devicetree/bindings/mips/brcm/soc.txt These all have a GPIO block as part of the pin controller and the GPIO block is a distinct sub-function of the pin controller, and it has up to 32 GPIOs per block, hence it has its own subnode inside the pin controller. This driver follows the pattern of the Ingenic pin controller, another MIPS SoC: Documentation/devicetree/bindings/pinctrl/ingenic,pinctrl.yaml Another SoC with several GPIO blocks inside the pin controller is SparX5 and that also follows this pattern: Documentation/devicetree/bindings/pinctrl/microchip,sparx5-sgpio.yaml (This has an example with more than one GPIO block inside the pin controller.) Yours, Linus Walleij