On 2018-08-08 11:08, Andy Shevchenko wrote: > On Wed, Aug 8, 2018 at 11:30 AM, Hans de Goede <hdegoede@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: >> On systems with ACPI instantiated i2c-clients, normally there is 1 fw_node >> per i2c-device and that fw-node contains 1 I2cSerialBus resource for that 1 >> i2c-device. >> >> But in some rare cases the manufacturer has decided to describe multiple >> i2c-devices in a single ACPI fwnode with multiple I2cSerialBus resources. >> >> An earlier attempt to fix this in the i2c-core resulted in a lot of extra >> code to support this corner-case. >> >> This commit introduces a new i2c-multi-instantiate driver which fixes this >> in a different way. This new driver can be built as a module which will >> only loaded on affected systems. >> >> This driver will instantiate a new i2c-client per I2cSerialBus resource, >> using the driver_data from the acpi_device_id it is binding to to tell it >> which chip-type (and optional irq-resource) to use when instantiating. >> >> Note this driver depends on a platform device being instantiated for the >> ACPI fwnode, see the i2c_multi_instantiate_ids list of ACPI device-ids in >> drivers/acpi/scan.c: acpi_device_enumeration_by_parent(). > > Thanks for an update! My comments below. > >> +struct i2c_inst_data { >> + const char *type; >> + int irq_idx; >> +}; > >> +struct i2c_multi_inst_data { > >> + int no_clients; > > Name a bit confusing. What about num_clients? > >> + struct i2c_client *clients[0]; >> +}; >> + >> +static int i2c_multi_inst_probe(struct platform_device *pdev) >> +{ >> + struct i2c_multi_inst_data *multi; >> + const struct acpi_device_id *match; >> + const struct i2c_inst_data *inst_data; >> + struct i2c_board_info board_info = {}; >> + struct device *dev = &pdev->dev; >> + struct acpi_device *adev; >> + char name[32]; >> + int i, ret; >> + >> + match = acpi_match_device(dev->driver->acpi_match_table, dev); >> + if (!match) { >> + dev_err(dev, "Error ACPI match data is missing\n"); >> + return -ENODEV; >> + } >> + inst_data = (const struct i2c_inst_data *)match->driver_data; >> + >> + adev = ACPI_COMPANION(dev); >> + > >> + /* Count number of clients to instantiate */ >> + for (i = 0; inst_data[i].type; i++) {} >> + >> + multi = devm_kmalloc(dev, >> + offsetof(struct i2c_multi_inst_data, clients[i]), >> + GFP_KERNEL); >> + if (!multi) >> + return -ENOMEM; > > Here I see the following: > - it's kinda unusual use of offsetof(), perhaps i*sizeof() + sizeof() > would be more understandable > - there is no guard against i == 0 I don't see why a guard is needed? *Your* code below needs it, but that issue is not a concern for the original code. It might however be a good idea to fail the probe if there are no clients to instantiate, but that's a different issue... > > To solve both, it might be like > > struct i2c_multi_inst_data { > int num_clients; > struct i2c_client *clients; > }; > > ... > multi = devm_kmalloc(sizeof(*multi), GFP_KERNEL); > if (!multi) > return -ENOMEM; > > multi->clients = devm_kcalloc(i, sizeof(*multi->clients), GFP_KERNEL); > if (ZERO_PTR_OR_NULL(multi->clients)) > return -ENOMEM; > > But I would like to hear your (other's) opinion(s). I think using two allocations is a waste in this case. > >> + >> + multi->no_clients = i; >> + >> + for (i = 0; i < multi->no_clients; i++) { >> + memset(&board_info, 0, sizeof(board_info)); >> + strlcpy(board_info.type, inst_data[i].type, I2C_NAME_SIZE); >> + snprintf(name, sizeof(name), "%s-%s", match->id, >> + inst_data[i].type); >> + board_info.dev_name = name; >> + board_info.irq = 0; > >> + if (inst_data[i].irq_idx != -1) { > >> = 0 sounds more robust But not as flexible/future-proof. Why should 0 be the only valid IRQ index? Cheers, Peter >> + ret = acpi_dev_gpio_irq_get(adev, inst_data[i].irq_idx); >> + if (ret < 0) { > >> + dev_err(dev, "Error requesting irq at index %d: %d\n", >> + inst_data[i].irq_idx, ret); > > irq -> IRQ in the message. > >> + goto error; >> + } >> + board_info.irq = ret; >> + } >> + multi->clients[i] = i2c_acpi_new_device(dev, i, &board_info); >> + if (!multi->clients[i]) { >> + dev_err(dev, "Error creating i2c-client, idx %d\n", i); >> + ret = -ENODEV; >> + goto error; >> + } >> + } >> + >> + platform_set_drvdata(pdev, multi); >> + return 0; >> + >> +error: > >> + while (--i >= 0) > > It can be simple > > while (i--) > >> + i2c_unregister_device(multi->clients[i]); >> + >> + return ret; >> +} >> + >> +static int i2c_multi_inst_remove(struct platform_device *pdev) >> +{ >> + struct i2c_multi_inst_data *multi = platform_get_drvdata(pdev); >> + int i; >> + >> + for (i = 0; i < multi->no_clients; i++) >> + i2c_unregister_device(multi->clients[i]); >> + >> + return 0; >> +} >> + >> +static const struct i2c_inst_data bsg1160_data[] = { >> + { "bmc150_accel", 0 }, >> + { "bmc150_magn", -1 }, >> + { "bmg160", -1 }, >> + {} >> +}; >> + >> +/* >> + * Note new device-ids must also be added to i2c_multi_instantiate_ids in >> + * drivers/acpi/scan.c: acpi_device_enumeration_by_parent(). >> + */ >> +static const struct acpi_device_id i2c_multi_inst_acpi_ids[] = { >> + { "BSG1160", (unsigned long)bsg1160_data }, >> + { } >> +}; >> +MODULE_DEVICE_TABLE(acpi, i2c_multi_inst_acpi_ids); >> + >> +static struct platform_driver i2c_multi_inst_driver = { >> + .driver = { >> + .name = "I2C multi instantiate pseudo device driver", > >> + .acpi_match_table = ACPI_PTR(i2c_multi_inst_acpi_ids), > > We don't need ACPI_PTR for the driver which depends on ACPI. > In the general case we have an inconsistency with variable definition > (might be unused). > >> + }, >> + .probe = i2c_multi_inst_probe, >> + .remove = i2c_multi_inst_remove, >> +}; >> +module_platform_driver(i2c_multi_inst_driver); >> + >> +MODULE_DESCRIPTION("I2C multi instantiate pseudo device driver"); >> +MODULE_AUTHOR("Hans de Goede <hdegoede@xxxxxxxxxx>"); >> +MODULE_LICENSE("GPL"); >> -- >> 2.18.0 >> > > > -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-acpi" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html