First of all one of the parameter missed 'mockup' in its name, Second, the semantics of the integer pairs depends on the sign of the base (the first value in the pair). Update documentation to reflect the real code behaviour. Fixes: 2fd1abe99e5f ("Documentation: gpio: add documentation for gpio-mockup") Signed-off-by: Andy Shevchenko <andriy.shevchenko@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> --- Documentation/admin-guide/gpio/gpio-mockup.rst | 11 ++++++----- 1 file changed, 6 insertions(+), 5 deletions(-) diff --git a/Documentation/admin-guide/gpio/gpio-mockup.rst b/Documentation/admin-guide/gpio/gpio-mockup.rst index 9fa1618b3adc..493071da1738 100644 --- a/Documentation/admin-guide/gpio/gpio-mockup.rst +++ b/Documentation/admin-guide/gpio/gpio-mockup.rst @@ -17,17 +17,18 @@ module. gpio_mockup_ranges This parameter takes an argument in the form of an array of integer - pairs. Each pair defines the base GPIO number (if any) and the number - of lines exposed by the chip. If the base GPIO is -1, the gpiolib - will assign it automatically. + pairs. Each pair defines the base GPIO number (non-negative integer) + and the first number after the last of this chip. If the base GPIO + is -1, the gpiolib will assign it automatically. while the following + parameter is the number of lines exposed by the chip. - Example: gpio_mockup_ranges=-1,8,-1,16,405,4 + Example: gpio_mockup_ranges=-1,8,-1,16,405,409 The line above creates three chips. The first one will expose 8 lines, the second 16 and the third 4. The base GPIO for the third chip is set to 405 while for two first chips it will be assigned automatically. - gpio_named_lines + gpio_mockup_named_lines This parameter doesn't take any arguments. It lets the driver know that GPIO lines exposed by it should be named. -- 2.30.2