On 31/01/2024 14:17, Linus Walleij wrote: > On Wed, Jan 31, 2024 at 10:37 AM Bartosz Golaszewski <brgl@xxxxxxxx> wrote: > >> [Me] >>> reset -> virtual "gpio" -> many physical gpios[0..n] >> >> This is a different problem: it supports many users enabling the same >> GPIO (in Krzysztof's patch it's one but could be more if needed) but - >> unlike the broken NONEXCLUSIVE GPIOs in GPIOLIB - it counts the number >> of users and doesn't disable the GPIO for as long as there's at least >> one. > > I don't know if the NONEXCLUSIVE stuff is broken, if you mean reference > counting isn't working on them, then that is by design because they were > invented for regulators and such use cases that do their own reference > counting. It's also used for hacks where people need to look up a desc in > a second spot, (perhaps we can fix those better). > > As I say in commit b0ce7b29bfcd090ddba476f45a75ec0a797b048a > "This solution with a special flag is not entirely elegant and should ideally > be replaced by something more careful as this makes it possible for > several consumers to enable/disable the same GPIO line to the left > and right without any consistency." > > I think for regulators (which is the vast majority using it) it isn't broken > because the regulator reference counting is working. > > So if we solve that problem for reset, we probably should put it in > drivers/gpio/* somewhere so we can reuse the same solution for > regulators and get rid of NONEXCLUSIVE altogether I think? > > The NONEXCLUSIVE stuff was prompted by converting regulators to > gpio descriptors, so it was for the greater good one can say. Or the > lesser evil :( my judgement can be questioned here. I discussed the non-exclusive GPIOs with Bartosz quite a lot, who was Cced since beginning of this patchset, because that was my first approach, which was rejected: https://lore.kernel.org/all/b7aeda24-d638-45b7-8e30-80d287f498f8@xxxxxxxxxxxxx/ The non-exclusive GPIO was made explicitly for regulators, so it is working fine there, but it is broken everywhere else, where the drivers do not handle it in sane way as regulator core does. To make it working, either GPIO should be enable-count-aware, to which Bartosz was opposing with talks with me, or the subsystem should mimic regulators approach. In some way, my patchset is the second way here - reset framework subsystem being aware of shared GPIO and handles the enable-count, even though it is not using non-exclusive flag. Best regards, Krzysztof