On 08/21/2013 03:54 AM, Mark Rutland wrote: > On Tue, Aug 20, 2013 at 05:25:23PM +0100, Stephen Warren wrote: >> On 08/20/2013 02:44 AM, Mark Rutland wrote: >>> On Mon, Aug 19, 2013 at 05:09:34PM +0100, Stephen Warren wrote: >>>> On 08/19/2013 02:42 AM, Mark Rutland wrote: >>>>> On Fri, Aug 16, 2013 at 07:48:55PM +0100, Stephen Warren wrote: >>>>>> On 08/16/2013 08:47 AM, Jacek Anaszewski wrote: >>>>>>> Hi all, >>>>>>> >>>>>>> I'd like to consult the implementation of DT binding for the I2C device >>>>>>> that exposes two interrupt pins (INT1 and INT2). Both pins can be >>>>>>> configured to generate either data ready interrupts or event interrupts. >>>>>>> I want to implement DT binding that will handle also the situation >>>>>>> when only one of the interrupt sources is routed from the device >>>>>>> to the CPU. >>>>>>> >>>>>>> Below is my implementation using interrupt-map: >>>>>> >>>>>>> + - interrupt-parent : phandle to the interrupt map subnode >>>>>> >>>>>> When using interrupt-parent to point at an interrupt map, I believe you >>>>>> usually just point at the current node; there's no need to a child node. >>>>>> >>>>>>> + - interrupts : interrupt mapping for LPS331AP interrupt sources: >>>>>>> + 2 sources: 0 - data ready, 1 - threshold event >>>>>> >>>>>>> + - irq-map : irq sub-node defining interrupt map >>>>>>> + (all properties listed below are required): >>>>>> >>>>>> So, this node isn't required. >>>>>> >>>>>>> + - #interrupt-cells : should be 1 >>>>>> >>>>>>> + - #address-cells : should be 0 >>>>>>> + - #size-cells : should be 0 >>>>>> >>>>>> There are no addressed entities in this node, so I don't see why those >>>>>> two properties are needed. >>>>>> >>>>>>> + - interrupt-map : table of entries consisting of three child elements: >>>>>>> + - unit_interrupt_specifier - 0 : data ready, 1 : threshold event >>>>>>> + - interrupt parent phandle >>>>>>> + - parent unit interrupt specifier consisiting of two elements: >>>>>>> + - index of the interrupt within the controller >>>>>>> + - flags : should be 0 >>>>>> >>>>>> It's up to the binding for the node referenced by the phandle to define >>>>>> how many cells need be present for "flags", and their meaning. This >>>>>> binding shouldn't attempt to describe those. Equally, the concept of >>>>>> interrupt-map should be defined elsewwere (e.g. >>>>>> Documentation/devicetree/bindings/interrupt-controller/interrupts.txt); >>>>>> it's a generic that shouldn't need duplication in each binding that uses >>>>>> interrupts. >>>>>> >>>>>>> +Example: >>>>>>> + >>>>>>> +lps331ap@5d { >>>>>>> + compatible = "st,lps331ap"; >>>>>>> + reg = <0x5d>; >>>>>>> + drdy-int-pin = /bits/ 8 <2>; >>>>>>> + interrupt-parent = <&irq_map>; >>>>>>> + interrupts = <0>, <1>; >>>>>>> + >>>>>>> + irq_map: irq-map { >>>>>>> + #interrupt-cells = <1>; >>>>>>> + #address-cells = <0>; >>>>>>> + #size-cells = <0>; >>>>>>> + interrupt-map = <0 &gpf0 5 0>; >>>>>>> + }; >>>>>>> +}; >>>>>>> >>>>>>> And here is how the driver uses this information: >>>>>>> >>>>>>> - if interrupt-map is empty then the driver configures >>>>>>> itself to work without interrupt support >>>>>> >>>>>> The presence or lack of interrupt support should be driven by the >>>>>> presence of the interrupts property. interrupt-map should only be used >>>>>> (if present) to assist in the parsing of the interrupts property. >>>>>> >>>>>>> - if only one interrupt source is available then the driver >>>>>>> configures the device to generate data ready interrupts on >>>>>>> the corresponding INTx pin (in this case the driver must know which >>>>>>> of the device pins is routed to the cpu - >>>>>>> st,data-ready-interrupt-pin property conveys this information) >>>>>>> - if both interrupt sources are available then the driver configures >>>>>>> the device to generate data ready interrupts on the interrupt pin >>>>>>> corresponding to the interrupt source with index 0 and event >>>>>>> interrupts to the interrupt source with index 1. >>>>>>> >>>>>>> This solution seems to be a little awkward so I'd like to ask >>>>>>> if there is any neater way to handle presented requirements. >>>>>>> The solution must facilitate passing information about two >>>>>>> interrupt sources two the I2C driver. I have been unable to find >>>>>>> similar solution in the kernel so far. >>>>>> >>>>>> Indeed. I think it would be better to work as follows: >>>>>> >>>>>> interrupts: contains one or two interrupt specifiers. The first entry >>>>>> always defines the data ready interrupt. The second entry, if present, >>>>>> defines the threshold event interrupt. This at least allows the >>>>>> following combinations to be very simple expressed: >>>>>> >>>>>> * no interrrupts >>>>>> * just data >>>>>> * both data and threshold (assuming they're routed to the same parent) >>>>>> >>>>>> (you could swap the order if it's likely to be more common to have just >>>>>> a threshold interrupt without any data interrupt). >>>>>> >>>>>> In order to allow the presence of a threshold interrupt but no data >>>>>> interrupt, then I think you would need interrupt-map: >>>>>> >>>>>> lps331ap: lps331ap@5d { >>>>>> compatible = "st,lps331ap"; >>>>>> reg = <0x5d>; >>>>>> interrupt-parent = <&lps331ap>; >>>>>> interrupts = <0>, <1>; >>>>>> interrupt-map = <0 0>, /* nowhere */ >>>>>> <1 &gpf0 6 0>; >>>>>> }; >>>>> >>>>> The interrupt-names property exists for this purpose (describing >>>>> interrupts which may or may not be present). Describing a nonexistent >>>>> interrupt and mapping it nowhere feels like a hack to me when we can >>>>> describe exactly what's present. >>>> >>>> But the rules for interrupts basically precludes the useful use of >>>> interrupt-names. >>>> >>>> The interrupts property was introduced long before interrupt-names. As >>>> such, the rule was always that entries in interrupts had to appear at a >>>> specific index in the property, in other words, the property had to be >>>> in a specific order, and there's no way of missing entries out. >>> >>> Ok, so for bindings that existed before reg-names, and never mentioned >>> reg-names, indexed accesses to reg entries must always be used. >>> >>>> The interrupt-names property was added much later and more as a >>>> documentation for the order in *.dts than as the primary lookup key. >>>> Even with an interrupt-names property present, the order of entries in >>>> interrupts is still fixed. >>>> >>>> So, using interrupt-names doesn't allow you to have optional entries in >>>> interrupts, nor re-order the property. We really should not have added >>>> interrupt-names, since it gives false impressions. >>> >>> I'm not sure why that has to be true for new bindings. The new bindings >>> were never used before the existence of reg-names, so it doesn't seem so >>> bad for the new bindings to require the use of reg-names, or to define >>> some optional usage of reg-names. >> >> IIRC, the argument put forth was that OSs may assume a complete lack of >> the reg-names property and only allow looking up reg values by index, >> and hence making use of reg-names would prohibit those OSs from >> supporting new bindings. Although that said, quite why reg-names was >> then allowed as a property I don't know. IIRC, another argument was that >> we didn't want to force people into the overhead of parsing via >> reg-names when a simple index could be used instead, so reg had to >> always have a defined order even if reg-names was allowed. >> >> On the assumption that reg-names wasn't retro-fitted to any "old" >> bindings that originally just documents reg and not reg-names, then I >> suppose we could say: >> >> If a binding defines reg-names, either reg-names or hard-coded indices >> may be used to find entries in reg. Otherwise, only hard-coded indices >> may be allowed. >> >> But I'm worried that people will see reg-names and assume they can put >> entries in arbitrary order... > > We should fix the binding documents to make clear which bindings require > their reg properties at fixed indexes, and those which allow for > arbitrarily ordered named reg entries. Named reg entries are really > useful for blocks with optional components, and given we have drivers > using them, they're already mandatory for some bindings. No, we should fix the bindings that have arbitrarily ordered reg properties. There is no obvious reg examples of this that I see from a quick scan of dts files. There is this questionable use of "empty" for interrupt-names: arch/arm/boot/dts/imx23.dtsi: interrupts = <0 14 20 0 13 13 13 13>; interrupt-names = "empty", "ssp0", "ssp1", "empty", "gpmi0", "gpmi1", "gpmi2", "gpmi3"; Rob -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-iio" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html