On Thu, May 11, 2017 at 10:09:16AM +0200, Uwe Kleine-König wrote: > On Thu, May 11, 2017 at 03:51:36PM +0800, Shawn Guo wrote: > > On Mon, May 08, 2017 at 10:59:25AM +0200, Uwe Kleine-König wrote: > > > Signed-off-by: Uwe Kleine-König <u.kleine-koenig@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx> > > > --- > > > Hello, > > > > > > with this patch applied I get the following lines in dmesg which looks > > > fine: > > > > > > [ 0.227913] gpio gpiochip0: (80018000.pinctrl:gpio@0): created GPIO range 0->31 ==> 80018000.pinctrl PIN 0->31 > > > [ 0.236100] gpio gpiochip1: (80018000.pinctrl:gpio@1): created GPIO range 0->31 ==> 80018000.pinctrl PIN 32->63 > > > [ 0.244463] gpio gpiochip2: (80018000.pinctrl:gpio@2): created GPIO range 0->31 ==> 80018000.pinctrl PIN 64->95 > > > [ 0.253020] gpio gpiochip3: (80018000.pinctrl:gpio@3): created GPIO range 0->31 ==> 80018000.pinctrl PIN 96->127 > > > [ 0.261639] gpio gpiochip4: (80018000.pinctrl:gpio@4): created GPIO range 0->31 ==> 80018000.pinctrl PIN 128->159 > > > > > > But when looking at a used gpio > > > > > > # cat /sys/kernel/debug/gpio > > > gpiochip0: GPIOs 0-31, parent: platform/80018000.pinctrl:gpio@0, 80018000.pinctrl:gpio@0: > > > ... > > > gpio-20 (LED4 |? ) out hi > > > ... > > > > > > # grep "pin 20 " /sys/kernel/debug/pinctrl/80018000.pinctrl/pinmux-pins > > > pin 20 (GPMI_RDY0): leds (GPIO UNCLAIMED) function leds group leds.0 > > > > > > I wonder why there is still "GPIO UNCLAIMED". I would have expected that > > > this disappears and somehow references the gpio_request issued by the > > > led-gpio driver after my patch. > > > > > > What am I missing? > > > > It seems that's only the case where @strict of struct pinmux_ops is > > true. We should set it true for pinctrl-mxs, I guess? > > The description is: > > * @strict: do not allow simultaneous use of the same pin for GPIO and another > * function. Check both gpio_owner and mux_owner strictly before approving > * the pin request. Sorry, I misread the 'strict' code and my comment about it is completely a noise. I went through the code around requesting a pin, and found that we need to call pinctrl_request_gpio() from gpio driver to get the result you want. In that case, pin_request() will be called with a valid gpio_range as below. pinctrl_request_gpio() pinmux_request_gpio() pin_request(..., gpio_range) Right now, pin_request() is being called with a NULL gpio_range from pinmux_enable_setting(). That gets us the mux_owner rather than gpio_owner for the pin. Shawn -- 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