On Tue, Jan 8, 2013 at 12:14 PM, Viresh Kumar <viresh.kumar@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > On 8 January 2013 16:41, Lee Jones <lee.jones@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: >>> Hmm.. I tried a bit, but couldn't find any such call :( >>> Probably an assumption is taken here. GPIO pins which are going to be used as >>> interrupt lines, wouldn't be getting set in output mode at all. So, >>> once they are put >>> in input mode in beginning, nobody would change it ever. >>> >>> Much of gpio controllers configure gpio pins in input mode in their probe(). >>> >>> Maybe, there is something else :) >> >> Pinctrl? > > I don't think pinctrl is playing with it. I searched for > "direction_input" string and > pinctrl routine also had similar name. I couldn't fine use of > direction_input anywhere > in kernel, for setting them as irqs for OF cases. pinctrl has pinctrl_gpio_direction_input() and pinctrl_gpio_direction_output() which are supposed to be called *only* by GPIOlib frontends using pinctrl as backend to control the pins. But if it's a pinctrl driver using standard pinconfig from include/linux/pinctrl/pinconf-generic.h I'm all for adding a PIN_CONFIG_INPUT_ENABLE to these definintions so it can be set up as input at boot from the device tree using hogs or something, that make things easy when using GPIOs as IRQ providers only. So the alternative is to just set up the IRQ using the gpiolib functions for this: of_get_gpio() if you need the number from DT, then gpio_request() and gpio_direction_input() as on any GPIO. This can be done in the device driver or board code depending on use case. In the Nomadik I did this (maybe ugly) hack for a similar case: +/* + * The SMSC911x IRQ is connected to a GPIO pin, but the driver expects + * to simply request an IRQ passed as a resource. So the GPIO pin needs + * to be requested by this hog and set as input. + */ +static int __init cpu8815_eth_init(void) +{ + struct device_node *eth; + int gpio, irq, err; + + eth = of_find_node_by_path("/external-bus@34000000/ethernet@300"); + if (!eth) { + pr_info("could not find any ethernet controller\n"); + return 0; + } + gpio = of_get_gpio(eth, 0); + err = gpio_request(gpio, "eth_irq"); + if (err) { + pr_info("failed to request ethernet GPIO\n"); + return -ENODEV; + } + err = gpio_direction_input(gpio); + if (err) { + pr_info("failed to set ehernet GPIO as input\n"); + return -ENODEV; + } + irq = gpio_to_irq(gpio); + pr_info("enabled ethernet GPIO %d, IRQ %d\n", gpio, irq); + return 0; +} +device_initcall(cpu8815_eth_init); I haven't read review comments on that patch. Maybe it's not such a good idea to add the GPIO to the device itself when it's being hogged by board code like this. It's a bit of a grey area so I'm a bit confused here. Maybe the GPIO lib actually needs a "hog" mechanism that can request and set GPIO pins as input/output on boot and then forget about them. Yours, Linus Walleij -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-input" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html