On Mon, Jun 9, 2014 at 3:21 PM, Sascha Silbe <x-linux@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > The chips can operate either in regular or in bitbang mode. Care was > taken to prevent using GPIOs if the serial device is in use and vice > versa. Very interesting patch! I've seen USB-based GPIO things before but never a dual-mode thing. There was already a comment to move the implementation to a separate file, which I won't repeat. But I also want to bring the device model into question: normally when a mother device spawns children across different subsystems we model them as MFD devices (drivers/mfd) that instantiate children for the different subsystems. So you could spawn a serial and a GPIO device from a USB-based hub device there. I do not know if that is really apropriate in this case. It seems the device is first and foremost FTDI. But it could still spawn a child platform device for the GPIO stuff so that this can live as a separate driver under drivers/gpio/gpio-ftdi.c or similar. You could then use something like: struct platform_device *gdev; gdev = platform_device_alloc("gpio-ftdi", PLATFORM_DEVID_AUTO); /* pdata contains communication cookie for callbacks etc */ ret = platform_device_add_data(gdev, pdata, sizeof(*pdata)); ret = platform_device_add(gdev); Then we can probe that device normally in the GPIO subsystem like any other driver, just that it needs some <linux/usb/ftdi.h> header or similar to define the function calls to communicate with the FTDI driver. However Greg is device core maintainer and may have better ideas about this! Yours, Linus Walleij -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-gpio" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html