On Wed, May 29, 2024 at 7:30 PM Johan Hovold <johan+linaro@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > Rework the pm8008 driver to match the new binding which no longer > describes internal details like interrupts and register offsets > (including which of the two consecutive I2C addresses the registers > belong to). > > Instead make the interrupt controller implementation internal and pass > interrupts to the subdrivers using MFD cell resources. > > Note that subdrivers may either get their resources, like register block > offsets, from the parent MFD or this can be included in the subdrivers > directly. > > In the current implementation, the temperature alarm driver is generic > enough to just get its base address and alarm interrupt from the parent > driver, which already uses this information to implement the interrupt > controller. > > The regulator driver, however, needs additional information like parent > supplies and regulator characteristics so in that case it is easier to > just augment its table with the regulator register base addresses. > > Similarly, the current GPIO driver already holds the number of pins and > that lookup table can therefore also be extended with register offsets. > > Note that subdrivers can now access the two regmaps by name, even if the > primary regmap is registered last so that it is returned by default when > no name is provided in lookups. > > Finally, note that the temperature alarm and GPIO subdrivers need some > minor rework before they can be used with non-SPMI devices like the > PM8008. The temperature alarm MFD cell name specifically uses a "qpnp" > rather than "spmi" prefix to prevent binding until the driver has been > updated. ... > + dummy = devm_i2c_new_dummy_device(dev, client->adapter, client->addr + 1); > + if (IS_ERR(dummy)) { > + ret = PTR_ERR(dummy); > + dev_err(dev, "failed to claim second address: %d\n", ret); > + return ret; > + } > + ret = devm_regmap_add_irq_chip_fwnode(dev, fwnode, regmap, client->irq, > IRQF_SHARED, 0, &pm8008_irq_chip, &irq_data); > + if (ret) { > + dev_err(dev, "failed to add IRQ chip: %d\n", ret); > + return ret; > } I believe there is no harm to use return dev_err_probe(...); for these. But it seems you don't like that API. Whatever, no-one will die, just additional work for the future :-) -- With Best Regards, Andy Shevchenko