Re: [PATCH v2 2/2] pinctrl: nuvoton: add NPCM7xx pinctrl and GPIO driver

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Hi Linus,

Thanks a lot for your comments.

Sorry for my late reply, I was on vacation.

The last days I have been working to move NPCM pinctrl GPIO to GENERIC GPIO, most of the work have been done but I had the some issue.

I initialize bgpio as follow:
                        ret = bgpio_init(&pctrl->gpio_bank[id].gc,
                                         pctrl->dev, 4,
                                         pctrl->gpio_bank[id].base +
                                         NPCM7XX_GP_N_DIN,
                                         pctrl->gpio_bank[id].base +
                                         NPCM7XX_GP_N_DOUT,
                                         NULL,
                                         NULL,
                                         pctrl->gpio_bank[id].base +
                                         NPCM7XX_GP_N_IEM,
                                         BGPIOF_READ_OUTPUT_REG_SET);
After doing it, the directions functions I used are: bgpio_dir_out_inv, bgpio_dir_in_inv, bgpio_get_dir_inv 
and the I/O get function is bgpio_get_set 
By using inv directions:
direction out = 0 (gc->bgpio_dir &= ~bgpio_line2mask(gc, gpio))
direction in = 1 (gc->bgpio_dir |= bgpio_line2mask(gc, gpio))
The problem occur when reading the GPIO value from bgpio_get_set function, because the directions value are inverse it reading the wrong I/O registers
For direction out it reading dat register (instead of set register)
For direction in it calling set register (instead of dat register)
	if (gc->bgpio_dir & pinmask)
		return !!(gc->read_reg(gc->reg_set) & pinmask);
	else
		return !!(gc->read_reg(gc->reg_dat) & pinmask);

the same issue occur at bgpio_get_set_multiple function.
Maybe in bgpio_dir parameter direction out should be in both cases 1 and direction in = 0.
for now i did a local fix in the npcm pinctrl driver by setting bgpio_dir parameters as direction out = 1 and direction in = 0.
Thanks a lot,
Tomer










On 13 July 2018 at 11:51, Linus Walleij <linus.walleij@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
On Thu, Jul 12, 2018 at 11:42 PM Tomer Maimon <tmaimon77@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:

> Add Nuvoton BMC NPCM750/730/715/705 Pinmux and
> GPIO controller driver.
>
> Signed-off-by: Tomer Maimon <tmaimon77@xxxxxxxxx>

(...)
> +++ b/drivers/pinctrl/nuvoton/pinctrl-npcm7xx.c
> @@ -0,0 +1,2089 @@
> +// SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0
> +// Copyright (c) 2016-2018 Nuvoton Technology corporation.
> +// Copyright (c) 2016, Dell Inc
> +
> +#include <linux/device.h>
> +#include <linux/gpio.h>

As this is a driver you should only include <linux/gpio/driver.h>

> +#include <linux/interrupt.h>
> +#include <linux/irq.h>
> +#include <linux/mfd/syscon.h>

If you need syscon then the driver should select or depend
on MFD_SYSCON in Kconfig.

> +#include <linux/module.h>
> +#include <linux/of.h>
> +#include <linux/of_address.h>
> +#include <linux/of_irq.h>

Do you really need this include?

> +/* Structure for register banks */
> +struct NPCM7XX_GPIO {

Can we have this lowercase? Please?

> +       void __iomem            *base;
> +       struct gpio_chip        gc;
> +       int                     irqbase;
> +       int                     irq;
> +       spinlock_t              lock;
> +       void                    *priv;
> +       struct irq_chip         irq_chip;
> +       u32                     pinctrl_id;
> +};

So each GPIO bank has its own gpio chip and register
base, that is NICE! Because then it looks like you can
select GPIO_GENERIC and use the MMIO GPIO helper
library to handle the registers. Let's look into that
option!

> +struct NPCM7xx_pinctrl {
> +       struct pinctrl_dev      *pctldev;
> +       struct device           *dev;
> +       struct NPCM7XX_GPIO     gpio_bank[NPCM7XX_GPIO_BANK_NUM];
> +       struct irq_domain       *domain;

I wonder why the pin controller needs and IRQ domain but
I keep reading the code and I might find out...

> +enum operand {
> +       op_set,
> +       op_getbit,
> +       op_setbit,
> +       op_clrbit,
> +};

This looks complicated. I suspect you can use GPIO_GENERIC
to set/get and clear bits in the register(s).

> +/* Perform locked bit operations on GPIO registers */
> +static int gpio_bitop(struct NPCM7XX_GPIO *bank, int op, unsigned int offset,
> +                     int reg)
> +{
> +       unsigned long flags;
> +       u32 mask, val;
> +
> +       mask = (1L << offset);
> +       spin_lock_irqsave(&bank->lock, flags);
> +       switch (op) {
> +       case op_set:
> +               iowrite32(mask, bank->base + reg);
> +               break;
> +       case op_getbit:
> +               mask &= ioread32(bank->base + reg);
> +               break;
> +       case op_setbit:
> +               val = ioread32(bank->base + reg);
> +               iowrite32(val | mask, bank->base + reg);
> +               break;
> +       case op_clrbit:
> +               val = ioread32(bank->base + reg);
> +               iowrite32(val & (~mask), bank->base + reg);
> +               break;
> +       }
> +       spin_unlock_irqrestore(&bank->lock, flags);
> +       return !!mask;
> +}

This is essentially a reimplementation of drivers/gpio/gpio-mmio.c
(GPIO_GENERIC, also using a spinlock to protect the registers)
so let's use that instead :)

There are drivers already that reuse the spinlock inside the
generic GPIO chip to protect their other registers like for
IRQ registers.

> +static int npcmgpio_get_direction(struct gpio_chip *chip, unsigned int offset)
> +{
> +       struct NPCM7XX_GPIO *bank = gpiochip_get_data(chip);
> +       u32 oe, ie;
> +
> +       /* Get Input & Output state */
> +       ie = gpio_bitop(bank, op_getbit, offset, NPCM7XX_GP_N_IEM);
> +       oe = gpio_bitop(bank, op_getbit, offset, NPCM7XX_GP_N_OE);
> +       if (ie && !oe)
> +               return GPIOF_DIR_IN;
> +       else if (oe && !ie)
> +               return GPIOF_DIR_OUT;

These are consumer flags and should not be used in drivers.
Use plain 0/1 instead.

Anyways the problem goes away with GPIO_GENERIC.

> +static int npcmgpio_direction_input(struct gpio_chip *chip, unsigned int offset)
> +{
> +       return pinctrl_gpio_direction_input(offset + chip->base);
> +}

It's a bit tricksy to get this to work with GPIO_GENERIC.

After calling bgpio_init() you need to overwrite the assigned
.direction_input handler with this and then direct back to the
one assigned by GPIO_GENERIC.

Something like this:

1. Add two indirection pointers to the npcm7xx_gpio state container:

struct npcm7xx_gpio {
     (...)
      int (*direction_input)(struct gpio_chip *chip, unsigned offset);
      int (*direction_output)(struct gpio_chip *chip, unsigned offset,
int value);
     (...)
};

2. Save the pointers

struct npcm7xx_gpio *npcm;

bgpio_init( ... register setup ...)
npcm->direction_input = npcm->gc.direction_input;
npcm->direction_output = npcm->gc.direction_output;
npcm->gc.direction_input = npcmgpio_direction_input;
npcm->gc.direction_output = npcmgpio_direction_output;

3. Modify the functions like that:

static int npcmgpio_direction_input(struct gpio_chip *chip, unsigned int offset)
{
    struct npcm7xx_gpio *npcm = gpiochip_get_data(chip);
    int ret;

    ret = pinctrl_gpio_direction_input(offset + chip->base);
    if (ret)
        return ret;
    return npcm->direction_input(chip);
}

I'm sure you get the idea... if you think we can modify gpio-mmio
to be more helpful with this, suggestions are welcome!

> +/* Set GPIO to Output with initial value */
> +static int npcmgpio_direction_output(struct gpio_chip *chip,
> +                                    unsigned int offset, int value)
> +{
> +       struct NPCM7XX_GPIO *bank = gpiochip_get_data(chip);
> +
> +       dev_dbg(chip->parent, "gpio_direction_output: offset%d = %x\n", offset,
> +               value);
> +
> +       /* Check if we're enabled as an interrupt.. */
> +       if (gpio_bitop(bank, op_getbit, offset, NPCM7XX_GP_N_EVEN) &&
> +           gpio_bitop(bank, op_getbit, offset, NPCM7XX_GP_N_IEM)) {
> +               dev_dbg(chip->parent,
> +                       "gpio_direction_output: IRQ enabled on offset%d\n",
> +                       offset);
> +               return -EINVAL;
> +       }

This should not be necessary as you are using GPIOLIB_IRQCHIP,
which locks the GPIO for interrupt and disallows this to happen.

> +static int npcmgpio_gpio_request(struct gpio_chip *chip, unsigned int offset)
> +{
> +       dev_dbg(chip->parent, "gpio_request: offset%d\n", offset);
> +       return pinctrl_gpio_request(offset + chip->base);
> +}
> +
> +static void npcmgpio_gpio_free(struct gpio_chip *chip, unsigned int offset)
> +{
> +       dev_dbg(chip->parent, "gpio_free: offset%d\n", offset);
> +       pinctrl_gpio_free(offset + chip->base);
> +}

This needs the same pattern as the direction functions above, then
you can use GPIO_GENERIC (mmio).

> +static unsigned int npcmgpio_irq_startup(struct irq_data *d)
> +{
> +       struct gpio_chip *gc = irq_data_get_irq_chip_data(d);
> +       unsigned int gpio = d->hwirq;
> +
> +       /* active-high, input, clear interrupt, enable interrupt */
> +       dev_dbg(d->chip->parent_device, "startup: %u.%u\n", gpio, d->irq);
> +       npcmgpio_direction_output(gc, gpio, 1);
> +       npcmgpio_direction_input(gc, gpio);

Interesting dance. So it is required to set the line to
1 and then switch to input?

> +static struct irq_chip npcmgpio_irqchip = {
> +       .name = "NPCM7XX-GPIO-IRQ",
> +       .irq_ack = npcmgpio_irq_ack,
> +       .irq_unmask = npcmgpio_irq_unmask,
> +       .irq_mask = npcmgpio_irq_mask,
> +       .irq_set_type = npcmgpio_set_irq_type,
> +       .irq_startup = npcmgpio_irq_startup,
> +};

This code is looking good BTW.

The patch in my inbox just ends in the middle of everything, I wonder
why :( suspect the new gmail interface I'm using.

Anyways: the pointers above should keep you busy for the next
iteration of the patch, the pin control part seems pretty straight-forward.

Yours,
Linus Walleij


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