On Tue, May 12, 2015 at 8:46 PM, Gregory Fong <gregory.0xf0@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: > On Tue, May 12, 2015 at 3:55 AM, Linus Walleij <linus.walleij@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: >> Usually we don't like it when you hardcode gpio_base, and this >> field should anyway be present inside the bgpio_chip.gc.base >> isn't it? > > This was needed to deal with having a single irq_chip shared across > all of the gpio_chips in a GIO block. You mentioned that this might > not be the Right Way to do this in your reply on the cover page so > I'll try to explain the reasoning better there. > > FWIW: yes, this is inside the first bank's bgpio_chip, and it would be > possible to extract that info. However, since it is used in > - brcmstb_gpio_to_irq > - brcmstb_gpio_hwirq_to_offset > - brcmstb_gpio_irq_bank_handler > - brcmstb_gpio_of_xlate > > It seemed like it would be easier to follow if this were just stored > this in the priv struct, even if it is duplication of information. OK I see. Even if you go for the approach I suggest in the cover letter it is indeed necessary to keep track of the base I can see, since we span multiple gpio_chips So it's fine with a local variable for this. >>> + gc->base = gpio_base; >> >> I strongly suggest that you try using -1 as base here instead >> for dynamic assignment of GPIO numbers. > > That is what I did originally. However, this results in a very > unpleasant numbering scheme, at least as currently implemented. > > When -1 is base, as you know, numbering goes descending from 255 > (IIRC). Right now I'm using the of_property_for_each_u32 loop over > bank widths to go through the banks. To keep the example > straightforward, let's pretend our GIO block only has two banks. > Here's how they're arranged: > > bank 0: starts at 0xf040a700, contains GPIOs 0-31 > bank 1: starts at 0xf040a720, contains GPIOs 32-63 > > Right now, with -1 as base, calling gpiochip_add() inside of that loop > will results in them getting this numbering: > > bank 0: linux GPIOs 224-255 > bank 1: linux GPIOs 192-223 Yeah I kind of think it's a feature because we don't want people to rely on the static GPIO numbering ;) Buy OK yeah I see the point. Let's keep the base static for now. > Looking at this now, I think I could just add another loop afterward > to do the gpiochip_add()'s in reverse order, resulting in the > numbering ascending with banks as expected. Does this seem sensible? No, that relies on the internal semantic structure of the gpiolib. It's better to use .base as a hint then. >> And this mask also mask the unused pins as GIO_MASK() >> does not respect bank_width. > > I'll be getting rid of imask anyway as you suggested. Awesome. 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