On Fri, Oct 31, 2014 at 6:49 PM, Linus Walleij <linus.walleij@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > On Tue, Oct 28, 2014 at 12:05 AM, Matthias Klein > <matthias.klein@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: >> Am 27.10.2014 um 23:44 schrieb Stephen Warren: > >>> What's the motivation for this? The GPIO IDs should all come from DT, >>> which encodes everything as an ID relative to a particular controllers, and >>> hence the actual value of the base address should be irrelevant. >> >> - To be in sync with the GPIO numbers in the datasheet / documentation > > We are moving away from global GPIO numbers because they are > an eternal pain. We would replace them with a local offset number > just as the second column in /proc/interrupts > > Hm we should patch <debugfs/gpio> to show local offsets... > >> - For userland applications which rely on these GPIO numbers > > ARGH!!! > > A much better idea is to add labels to your GPIOs so you can > identify them by name. Augment the driver with labeling capability > if need be, see e.g. commit 781f6d710d4482eab05cfaad50060a0ea8c0e4e0 > "gpio: generic: Add label to platform data" > > You just need to figure out how to do the same naming from the > device tree. Maybe some new binding is needed, others are > discussing how to do exporting of GPIOs from devicetree > anyway, see the mailing list. On a related note we are feeling more and more pressure for a way to unambiguously access GPIOs from user-space, and we should probably try and come with a solution for this. Ideas so far: 1) Export GPIOs with a name - it seems like this one will happen soon. 2) Export GPIOs using their controller-relative number (instead of their global number) under the controller's sysfs node. But since controllers are also named after the first global number they manage, we would still have a problem here. In any case this reliance of user-space on particular GPIO numbers is becoming a burden. We will soon get rid of the global ARCH_NR_GPIOS-sized array of gpio_descs, and the next step would be to get rid of the ARCH_NR_GPIOS itself. However, this macro is used to decide the starting number for GPIO chips without an explicit "base" attribute, so I am not sure whether we can remove it at all, unless we can agree that GPIO numbers are variable and not part of the ABI. -- 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