On Tue, Mar 16, 2021 at 06:26:13PM +0200, Andy Shevchenko wrote: > From: Jan Kiszka <jan.kiszka@xxxxxxxxxxx> > > Neither the ACPI description on the Quark platform provides the required > information is to do establish generic handling nor hardware capable of > doing it. According to the datasheet the hardware can generate SCI events. > Therefore, we need to hook from the driver directly into SCI handler of > the ACPI subsystem in order to catch and report GPIO-related events. > Validated on the Quark-based IOT2000 platform. This depends on the test by Jan or somebody with the same hardware available. > +static u32 sch_gpio_sci_handler(void *context) > +{ > + struct sch_gpio *sch = context; > + struct gpio_chip *gc = &sch->chip; > + unsigned long core_status, resume_status; > + unsigned long pending; > + int offset; > + core_status = inl(sch->iobase + GTS + 0x00); > + resume_status = inl(sch->iobase + GTS + 0x20); > + > + pending = (resume_status << sch->resume_base) | core_status; > + > + for_each_set_bit(offset, &pending, sch->chip.ngpio) > + generic_handle_irq(irq_find_mapping(gc->irq.domain, offset)); > + > + outl(core_status, sch->iobase + GTS + 0x00); > + outl(resume_status, sch->iobase + GTS + 0x20); I guess this still needs to be protected by spin_lock. > + return pending ? ACPI_INTERRUPT_HANDLED : ACPI_INTERRUPT_NOT_HANDLED; > +} ... Also I am in doubt that we need to instantiate an IRQ chip if the ACPI SCI handler registration fails. But I don't know what is better approach here, to NULL the pointer, or try to register handler before we will have an IRQ chip in place. Any recommendations? -- With Best Regards, Andy Shevchenko