On Wed, May 29, 2024 at 04:38:53PM +0300, Ceclan, Dumitru wrote: > On 28/05/2024 20:52, Conor Dooley wrote: > > On Tue, May 28, 2024 at 03:16:07PM +0300, Ceclan, Dumitru wrote: > >> On 27/05/2024 20:48, Conor Dooley wrote: > >>> On Mon, May 27, 2024 at 08:02:34PM +0300, Dumitru Ceclan via B4 Relay wrote: > >>>> From: Dumitru Ceclan <dumitru.ceclan@xxxxxxxxxx> > >>>> + adi,channel-type: > >>>> + description: > >>>> + Used to differentiate between different channel types as the device > >>>> + register configurations are the same for all usage types. > >>>> + Both pseudo-differential and single-ended channels will use the > >>>> + single-ended specifier. > >>>> + $ref: /schemas/types.yaml#/definitions/string > >>>> + enum: > >>>> + - single-ended > >>>> + - differential > >>>> + default: differential > >>> > >>> I dunno if my brain just ain't workin' right today, or if this is not > >>> sufficiently explained, but why is this property needed? You've got > >>> diff-channels and single-channels already, why can you not infer the > >>> information you need from them? What should software do with this > >>> information? > >>> Additionally, "pseudo-differential" is not explained in this binding. > >> > >> In previous thread we arrived to the conclusion single-ended and > >> pseudo-differential channels should be marked with the flag > >> "differential=false" in the IIO channel struct. This cannot > >> really be inferred as any input pair could be used in that > >> manner and the only difference would be in external wiring. > >> > >> Single-channels cannot be used to define such a channel as > >> two voltage inputs need to be selected. Also, we are already > >> using single-channel to define the current channels. > > > > If I understand correctly, the property could be simplified to a flag > > then, since it's only the pseudo differential mode that you cannot be > > sure of? > > You know when you're single-ended based on single-channel, so the > > additional info you need is only in the pseudo-differential case. > > > Yes, it could just be a boolean flag. The only thing I have against > that is the awkwardness of having both diff-channels and > differential=false within a channel definition. What I was suggesting was more like "adi,pseudo-differential" (you don't need to set the =false or w/e, flag properties work based on present/not present). I think that would avoid the awkwardness? > >> As for explaining the pseudo-differential, should it be explained? > >> A voltage channel within the context of these families is actually > >> differential(as there are always two inputs selected). > >> The single-ended and pseudo-diff use case is actually wiring up a > >> constant voltage to the selected negative input. > >> > >> I did not consider that this should be described, as there is no > >> need for an attribute to describe it. > > > > I dunno, adding an explanation of it in the text for the channel type > > seems trivial to do. "Both pseudo-differential mode (where the > > one of differential inputs is connected to a constant voltage) and > > single-ended channels will..." > > > >>> Also, what does "the device register configurations are the same for > >>> all uses types" mean? The description here implies that you'd be reading > >>> the registers to determine the configuration, but as far as I understand > >>> it's the job of drivers to actually configure devices. > >>> The only way I could interpret this that makes sense to me is that you're > >>> trying to say that the device doesn't have registers that allow you to > >>> do runtime configuration detection - but that's the norm and I would not > >>> call it out here. > >> > >> No, I meant that the same register configuration will be set for > >> both fully differential and single-ended. > >> > >> The user will set diff-channels = <0, 1>, bipolar(or not) and > >> then they can wire whatever to those pins: > >> - a differential signal > >> - AVSS to 1 and a single-ended signal to 0 > >> - AVSS+offset to 1 and a single-ended signal to 0 > >> (which is called pseudo-differential in some datasheets) > >> > >> All these cases will look the same in terms of configuration > > > > In that case, I'd just remove this sentence from the description then. > > How you configure the registers to use the device doesn't really have > > anything to do with describing the configuration of the hardware. > > Given it isn't related to configuration detection at runtime, what > > you've got written here just makes it seem like the property is > > redundant because the register settings do not change. > > > > Instead, use the description to talk about when the property should be > > used and what software should use it to determine, e.g. "Software can > > use vendor,channel-type to determine whether or not the measured voltage > > is absolute or relative". I pulled that outta my ass, it might not > > be what you're actually doing, but I figure you just want to know if > > you're measuring from the origin or either side of it. > >It's more to the "software can this property to correctly mark the channel Your quoting is scuffed here, I didn't write this! > as differential or not". Hope this is acceptable. But got it, thanks. As long as you've got a description that tells the OS what the property actually represents, I'm happy.
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