On 2021-07-19 01:44, Liam Beguin wrote: > On Sat Jul 17, 2021 at 12:55 PM EDT, Jonathan Cameron wrote: >> On Fri, 16 Jul 2021 15:18:33 -0400 >> "Liam Beguin" <liambeguin@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: >> >>> On Thu Jul 15, 2021 at 5:48 AM EDT, Peter Rosin wrote: >>>> >>>> On 2021-07-15 05:12, Liam Beguin wrote: >>>>> From: Liam Beguin <lvb@xxxxxxxxxx> >>>>> >>>>> Some ADCs use IIO_VAL_INT_PLUS_{NANO,MICRO} scale types. >>>>> Add support for these to allow using the iio-rescaler with them. >>>>> >>>>> Signed-off-by: Liam Beguin <lvb@xxxxxxxxxx> >>>>> --- >>>>> drivers/iio/afe/iio-rescale.c | 15 +++++++++++++++ >>>>> 1 file changed, 15 insertions(+) >>>>> >>>>> diff --git a/drivers/iio/afe/iio-rescale.c b/drivers/iio/afe/iio-rescale.c >>>>> index 4c3cfd4d5181..a2b220b5ba86 100644 >>>>> --- a/drivers/iio/afe/iio-rescale.c >>>>> +++ b/drivers/iio/afe/iio-rescale.c >>>>> @@ -92,7 +92,22 @@ static int rescale_read_raw(struct iio_dev *indio_dev, >>>>> do_div(tmp, 1000000000LL); >>>>> *val = tmp; >>>>> return ret; >>>>> + case IIO_VAL_INT_PLUS_NANO: >>>>> + tmp = ((s64)*val * 1000000000LL + *val2) * rescale->numerator; >>>>> + do_div(tmp, rescale->denominator); >>>>> + >>>>> + *val = div_s64(tmp, 1000000000LL); >>>>> + *val2 = tmp - *val * 1000000000LL; >>>>> + return ret; >>>> >>>> This is too simplistic and prone to overflow. We need something like >>>> this >>>> (untested) >>>> >>>> tmp = (s64)*val * rescale->numerator; >>>> rem = do_div(tmp, rescale->denominator); >>>> *val = tmp; >>>> tmp = ((s64)rem * 1000000000LL + (s64)*val2) * rescale->numerator; >>>> do_div(tmp, rescale->denominator); >>>> *val2 = tmp; >>>> >>>> Still not very safe with numerator and denominator both "large", but >>>> much >>>> better. And then we need normalizing the fraction part after the above, >>>> of >>>> course. >>>> >>> >>> Understood, I'll test that. >>> >>>> And, of course, I'm not sure what *val == -1 and *val2 == 500000000 >>>> really >>>> means. Is that -1.5 or -0.5? The above may very well need adjusting for >>>> negative values... >>>> >>> >>> I would've assumed the correct answer is -1 + 500000000e-9 = -0.5 >>> but adding a test case to iio-test-format.c seems to return -1.5... >> > > Hi Jonathan, > >> No. -1.5 is as intended, though the IIO_VAL_PLUS_MICRO is rather >> confusing >> naming :( We should perhaps add more documentation for that. Signs were >> always a bit of a pain with this two integer scheme for fixed point. >> >> The intent is to have moderately readable look up tables with the >> problem that >> we don't have a signed 0 available. Meh, maybe this decision a long time >> back wasn't a the right one, but it may be a pain to change now as too >> many >> drivers to check! >> >> 1, 0000000 == 1 >> 0, 5000000 == 0.5 >> 0, 0000000 == 0 >> 0, -5000000 == -0.5 >> -1, 5000000 == -1.5 >> > > Understood, thanks for clearing that out. I just realized that do_div assumes unsigned operands... :-( Cheers, Peter