Am Thu, 1 Apr 2021 18:15:41 +0200 schrieb "Enrico Weigelt, metux IT consult" <lkml@xxxxxxxxx>: > On 29.03.21 19:49, Henning Schild wrote: > > Hi, > > > This driver adds initial support for several devices from Siemens. > > It is based on a platform driver introduced in an earlier commit. > > Where does the wdt actually come from ? > > Is it in the SoC ? (which SoC exactly). SoC-builtin wdt is a pretty > usual case. > > Or some external chip ? > > The code smells a bit like two entirely different wdt's that just have > some similarities. If that's the case, I'd rather split it into two > separate drivers and let the parent driver (board file) instantiate > the correct one. In fact they are the same watchdog device. The only difference is the "secondary enable" which controls whether the watchdog causes a reboot or just raises an alarm. The alarm feature is not even implemented in the given driver, we just enable that secondary enable regardless. In one range of devices (227E) that second enable is part of a pio-based control register. On the other range (427E) it unfortunately is a P2SB gpio, which gets us right into the discussion we have around the LEDs. With that i have my doubts that two drivers would be the way to go, most likely not. Only that i have no clue which pinctrl driver should be used here. My guess is "sunrisepoint" because the CPUs are "SkyLake" i.e. i5-6442EQ, i3-6102E And "grep INT344B /sys/firmware/acpi/tables/DSDT" matches. I booted a kernel patched with the series from Andy but the "pinctrl-sunrisepoint" does not seem to even claim the memory. Still trying to understand how to make use of these pinctrl drivers they are in place but i lack example users (drivers). If they should be available in sysfs, i might be looking at the wrong place ... /sys/class/gpio/ does not list anything regards, Henning > > --mtx >