On Fri, Jun 30, 2017 at 9:54 PM, Grygorii Strashko <grygorii.strashko@xxxxxx> wrote: > On 06/29/2017 09:16 AM, Linus Walleij wrote: >> On Tue, Jun 27, 2017 at 10:43 PM, Grygorii Strashko >> <grygorii.strashko@xxxxxx> wrote: >> >>> And my opinion is still the same here - It should be perfectly valid to create >>> mappings from gpio_to_irq() to handle properly orthogonality of gpiochip and >>> gpio-irqchip functionality and satisfy SPARSE_IRQ goal (allocate Linux virq and >>> irq descriptors on demand). >> >> You are right. >> >> I would rather say: GPIO drivers that have a 1-to-1 mapping between GPIO >> lines and IRQs should not do it, they should map up them all at probe(). >> > > Sry, can't completely agree here :( There could be 300 (or even thousands) > of gpios and only dozen of them will be used as GPIO IRQ, so statical mapping will > just waste system resources. So, better not define such kind of restrictions - > it seems platform/system specific. If there could, yeah. But the majority of the worlds systems use a hardcoded value of 512 GPIOs. See include/asm-generic/gpio.h: #ifndef ARCH_NR_GPIOS #if defined(CONFIG_ARCH_NR_GPIO) && CONFIG_ARCH_NR_GPIO > 0 #define ARCH_NR_GPIOS CONFIG_ARCH_NR_GPIO #else #define ARCH_NR_GPIOS 512 #endif #endif The only arch that overrides this is ARM, which has CONFIG_ARCH_NR_GPIO: # The GPIO number here must be sorted by descending number. In case of # a multiplatform kernel, we just want the highest value required by the # selected platforms. config ARCH_NR_GPIO int default 1024 if ARCH_BRCMSTB || ARCH_SHMOBILE || ARCH_TEGRA || \ ARCH_ZYNQ default 512 if ARCH_EXYNOS || ARCH_KEYSTONE || SOC_OMAP5 || \ SOC_DRA7XX || ARCH_S3C24XX || ARCH_S3C64XX || ARCH_S5PV210 default 416 if ARCH_SUNXI default 392 if ARCH_U8500 default 352 if ARCH_VT8500 default 288 if ARCH_ROCKCHIP default 264 if MACH_H4700 default 0 help Maximum number of GPIOs in the system. If unsure, leave the default value. So actually, noone use more than 1024 GPIOs. For each GPIO a descriptor of 16 bytes is allocated. So in worst case 16KiB. Also this is an upper cap: it just means the nax we have on any platform is 1024 statically allocated GPIO descriptors, not that they all get mapped to IRQs. That happens on a per-gpiochip basis. But every irq descriptor is pretty big (somewhere around 64+ bytes), so you have a point. If every GPIO allocates an IRQ descriptor, it may add up to as much as 64KiB on a machine with 1024 GPIOs. 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