Hi Pavel, On Thu, Mar 23, 2023 at 08:35:02PM +0100, Pavel Machek wrote: > > Some LEDs controllers are used with external pull-up for the interrupt > > line and the I2C lines, so we might need to enable a regulator to bring > > the lines into usable state. Otherwise, this might cause spurious > > interrupts and reading from I2C will fail. > > > > Implement support for "vddio-supply" that is enabled by the aw2013 driver > > so that the regulator gets enabled when needed. > > > > Signed-off-by: Lin, Meng-Bo <linmengbo0689@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx> > > > @@ -348,16 +350,20 @@ static int aw2013_probe(struct i2c_client *client) > > goto error; > > } > > > > - chip->vcc_regulator = devm_regulator_get(&client->dev, "vcc"); > > - ret = PTR_ERR_OR_ZERO(chip->vcc_regulator); > > - if (ret) { > > + chip->regulators[0].supply = "vcc"; > > + chip->regulators[1].supply = "vddio"; > > + ret = devm_regulator_bulk_get(&client->dev, > > + ARRAY_SIZE(chip->regulators), > > + chip->regulators); > > + if (ret < 0) { > > if (ret != -EPROBE_DEFER) > > dev_err(&client->dev, > > "Failed to request regulator: %d\n", ret); > > goto error; > > Won't this cause failures when optional vddio is unavailable? > The regulator core should print a warning "supply vddio not found, using dummy regulator" but then proceed normally. I think in almost all cases a separate I/O supply should actually exist that could be described in the device tree. It was likely just omitted because it's always-on or indirectly being enabled by other devices. So perhaps having this warning is even a good thing? Thanks, Stephan