On 02/09/17 07:17, Rob Herring wrote: > On Tue, Jan 24, 2017 at 12:05 PM, Rob Herring <robh+dt@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: >> On Tue, Jan 24, 2017 at 12:36 AM, Frank Rowand <frowand.list@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: >>> Hi Stephen, >>> >>> Sorry I did not get to v1 and v2 in a timely manner. >>> >>> >>> On 01/23/17 12:48, Stephen Boyd wrote: >>>> Platforms like 96boards have a standardized connector/expansion >>>> slot that exposes signals like GPIOs to expansion boards in an >>>> SoC agnostic way. We'd like the DT overlays for the expansion >>>> boards to be written once without knowledge of the SoC on the >>>> other side of the connector. This avoids the unscalable >>>> combinatorial explosion of a different DT overlay for each >>>> expansion board and SoC pair. >>>> >>>> We need a way to describe the GPIOs routed through the connector >>>> in an SoC agnostic way. Let's introduce nexus property parsing >>>> into the OF core to do this. This is largely based on the >>>> interrupt nexus support we already have. This allows us to remap >>>> a phandle list in a consumer node (e.g. reset-gpios) through a >>>> connector in a generic way (e.g. via gpio-map). Do this in a >>>> generic routine so that we can remap any sort of variable length >>>> phandle list. >>>> >>>> Taking GPIOs as an example, the connector would be a GPIO nexus, >>>> supporting the remapping of a GPIO specifier space to multiple >>>> GPIO providers on the SoC. DT would look as shown below, where >>>> 'soc_gpio1' and 'soc_gpio2' are inside the SoC, 'connector' is an >>>> expansion port where boards can be plugged in, and >>>> 'expansion_device' is a device on the expansion board. >>>> >>>> soc { >>>> soc_gpio1: gpio-controller1 { >>>> #gpio-cells = <2>; >>>> }; >>>> >>>> soc_gpio2: gpio-controller2 { >>>> #gpio-cells = <2>; >>>> }; >>>> }; >>>> >>>> connector: connector { >>>> #gpio-cells = <2>; >>>> gpio-map = <0 0 &soc_gpio1 1 0>, >>>> <1 0 &soc_gpio2 4 0>, >>>> <2 0 &soc_gpio1 3 0>, >>>> <3 0 &soc_gpio2 2 0>; >>>> gpio-map-mask = <0xf 0x0>; >>>> gpio-map-pass-thru = <0x0 0x1> >>>> }; >>>> >>>> expansion_device { >>>> reset-gpios = <&connector 2 GPIO_ACTIVE_LOW>; >>>> }; >>> >>> The how to architect connectors and plugs threads fell asleep before >>> coming to a resolution. We need to revive that discussion. >>> >>> One of the concepts of the plug and connector architecture is that >>> a main board may contain multiple connectors of the same type (or >>> different types, but the same type is sufficient for this discussion). >>> >>> The node describing the card that plugs into one of the connectors >>> does not know the phandle of the connector it is going to be >>> connected to. Some other mechanism is provided to allow a card >>> to be plugged into any of the available connectors. If there are >>> two identical cards plugged into two connectors, then both cards >>> have the same exact device tree node. But some mechanism will >>> exist to resolve (or "link") the two card nodes to the different >>> connector nodes. >>> >>> As a result of this, in the above example the reset-gpios property >>> in the node 'expansion_device' can not contain '&connector'. The >>> concept of &connector belongs to the entire expansion_device node, >>> not to individual properties within the node. >> >> I think this is easily solved with a connector having 2 halves and >> that we need to search parents for *-map properties. Inheriting from >> parents is a common pattern in DT though perhaps not walking the >> parents of a phandle. So we'd have something like this: >> >> base-connector-1 { >> gpio-map = ... >> connector { >> child { >> some-gpios = <&connector 1>; >> }; >> }; >> }; >> >> base-connector-2 { >> gpio-map = ... >> connector { >> child { >> some-gpios = <&connector 1>; >> }; >> }; >> }; >> >> Now, how we resolve that /connector from an overlay targets >> /base-connector-1 and /base-connector-2 is an orthogonal issue and one >> that's going to be connector specific (at least for probe-able >> connectors). > > Frank, any more comments on this? If not, I plan to apply this series. > > Rob Yes, how we resolve which connector a plug goes into is orthogonal. My objection is that the original example has a property in the plug node (that is, on the expansion board), directly referencing the connector node, instead of referencing a resource inside the connector node. In the original example, it would make more sense for the first item in the reset-gpios property to be &gpio-map or "gpio-map" instead of &connector. -Frank -- 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