Hi Andy, On Wed, Oct 24, 2018 at 3:02 AM Andy Shevchenko <andy.shevchenko@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > On Mon, Oct 22, 2018 at 04:34:55PM -0700, Rajat Jain wrote: > > On Fri, Oct 19, 2018 at 2:13 AM Andy Shevchenko > > <andy.shevchenko@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > > On Fri, Oct 19, 2018 at 12:53 AM Rajat Jain <rajatja@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > > > > across other users of this API (other MMC host controller drivers). > > > > > > > if (slot->cd_idx >= 0) { > > > > - ret = mmc_gpiod_request_cd(host->mmc, NULL, slot->cd_idx, > > > > + ret = mmc_gpiod_request_cd(host->mmc, "cd", slot->cd_idx, > > > > slot->cd_override_level, 0, NULL); > > > > > > Yes. > > > > > > > + if (ret && ret != -EPROBE_DEFER) > > > > + ret = mmc_gpiod_request_cd(host->mmc, NULL, > > > > + slot->cd_idx, > > > > + slot->cd_override_level, > > > > + 0, NULL); > > > > > > And no. Instead of this part you need to provide an ACPI GPIO mapping table. > > > > Sure, I am willing to do so, and I tried earlier too. However, certain > > doubts arose in my mind when I tried that and I posted my questions > > earlier (https://lkml.org/lkml/2018/9/28/507) but couldn't elicit any > > response. Unfortunately I still do not have answers. My primary > > questions are: > > > > 1) - It seems that 1 SDHCI device may support multiple slots (looking > > at the code). It is not clear to me if they could share card detect > > interrupts, or should have separate ones? > > This is more likely question to HW engineers of your platform with a caveat > that there should be a way to distinguish exact slot in which card is being > inserted. > > > Also, the driver may not > > really know? > > I think in such case the bug in HW design and / or driver. Why? You can have a shared or dedicated interrupt and the driver does not really need to know if it can poll the status. > > > So should I add 1 or two pins using the > > devm_acpi_dev_add_driver_gpios(). > > This depends on the above, e.g. HW design, ACPI tables. Yes, it depends on the HW design and that is exactly why the approach with devm_acpi_dev_add_driver_gpios() does not work well here: this is a generic driver used on many platforms and you are trying to put the platform knowledge into the driver. Here we are lucky I guess as I do not believe anyone is using more than one slot, so we can have a tavle with a single entry, but actually doing the fallback the way Rajat was proposing is more correct. Or you have a table with N entries, where N is hopefully sufficiently large. > > > > Is some one familiar with SDHC > > driver can answer these questions, it shall be great. > > Actually above questions better to ask in linux-mmc mailing list, which by the > fact is in Cc list already. So, wait for someone to clarify. > > > > 2) I'm not really sure what should I set "active_low" to? Isn't this > > something that should be specified by platform / ACPI too, and driver > > should just be able to say say choose whatever the ACPI says? > > > > struct acpi_gpio_params { > > unsigned int crs_entry_index; > > unsigned int line_index; > > bool active_low; > > }; > > > ACPI specification misses this property, that's why we have it in the > structure. In your case it should be provided by _DSD and thus be consistent > with the hardcoded values. Again, you think as if the driver was platform specific; it is not. I have 1000s of systems with different ACPI tables. Let's say half of them use one polarity, and half another. Which polarity do you propose to use? Thanks. -- Dmitry