On Fri, Sep 15, 2023 at 7:01 AM Linus Walleij <linus.walleij@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > On Thu, Sep 14, 2023 at 4:27 PM Rob Herring <robh@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > On Thu, Sep 14, 2023 at 3:40 AM Linus Walleij <linus.walleij@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > > On Wed, Sep 13, 2023 at 3:34 PM Rob Herring <robh@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > > > On Tue, Sep 12, 2023 at 03:44:30PM +0200, Linus Walleij wrote: > > > > > We reuse the trigger-sources phandle to just point to > > > > > GPIOs we may want to use as LED triggers. > > > > > > > > > > Example: > > > > > > > > > > gpio: gpio@0 { > > > > > compatible "my-gpio"; > > > > > gpio-controller; > > > > > #gpio-cells = <2>; > > > > > interrupt-controller; > > > > > #interrupt-cells = <2>; > > > > > #trigger-source-cells = <2>; > > > > > > > > BTW, this is not documented for any GPIO binding. If we want to specify > > > > the cell size, then it has to be added to every GPIO controller binding. > > > > If not, we then need to reference gpio.yaml in every GPIO controller > > > > binding (along with unevaluatedProperties). Doesn't have to be done for > > > > this patch to go in though. > > > > > > Yeah I mean this trigger-sources = <...>; one-size-fits-all is a bit > > > weird in a way. > > > > > > My other idea was to simply add trigger-gpios to the normal way > > > and be done with it, but now the trigger binding has this weird > > > thing. > > > > > > Would trigger-gpios be better? > > > > Then GPIOs are different than everyone else. I think we have to think > > about other bindings too. While we could standardize the naming here > > with trigger-gpios, that won't work with the foos/foo-names style of > > bindings. > > > > trigger-sources is not widely used as it is just USB ATM and a few > > platforms. We could come up with something different. > > "trigger-sources-<cellname>" is the only idea I have. Then the > > property name gives you the cell name to read. But variable property > > names have their own challenges. We would need to look at all the > > current trigger sources (i.e. the linux,default-trigger ones) and see > > what else might need this. > > I think it in a way is elegant with the trigger-sources phandle as it > is so I would stick with this. > > I can just add '#trigger-source-cells' to the existing GPIO > bindings and it's a bit tedious since we don't have a common file > for the GPIO chip stuff, but it's just lots of lines. We do, gpio.yaml in dtschema. We just didn't reference it in all controllers because at the time unevaluatedProperties didn't exist/work and you still have to list most properties to define their constraints. In general, we reference the common schema for ones with child nodes, but not ones which are just #foo-cells and other properties. For GPIO, it's evolved to the point that referencing the common schema makes sense mainly because we have the hog nodes now. I said before we still need '#trigger-source-cells' in each schema, but really I suppose if we just set it to 1 or 2 cells in the common schema, that would be good enough. It's so rarely used. I expect (because there's discussions on it) someday jsonschema will support data dependent schemas (i.e. if the value of prop is X, then apply schema). Actually, we can do that already with if/then schemas, but it would be kind of verbose. > I guess it would be better to break out gpio-common.yaml and > gpio-common-irq.yaml for GPIO controllers with or without > interrupt support and then add '#trigger-source-cells' to just > those supporting IRQs because I think only that makes sense, > polling for a line to change isn't quite a "trigger". No need to split them just for that: dependencies: '#trigger-source-cells': interrupt-controller Though maybe a split makes sense anyways. Rob