Hi, On 16/03/2023 13:05, Md Danish Anwar wrote: > Hi Roger, > > On 15/03/23 17:52, Roger Quadros wrote: >> >> >> On 13/03/2023 13:11, MD Danish Anwar wrote: >>> From: Suman Anna <s-anna@xxxxxx> >>> >>> The PRUSS CFG module is represented as a syscon node and is currently >>> managed by the PRUSS platform driver. Add easy accessor functions to set >>> GPI mode, MII_RT event enable/disable and XFR (XIN XOUT) enable/disable >>> to enable the PRUSS Ethernet usecase. These functions reuse the generic >>> pruss_cfg_update() API function. >>> >>> Signed-off-by: Suman Anna <s-anna@xxxxxx> >>> Co-developed-by: Grzegorz Jaszczyk <grzegorz.jaszczyk@xxxxxxxxxx> >>> Signed-off-by: Grzegorz Jaszczyk <grzegorz.jaszczyk@xxxxxxxxxx> >>> Signed-off-by: Puranjay Mohan <p-mohan@xxxxxx> >>> Signed-off-by: MD Danish Anwar <danishanwar@xxxxxx> >>> --- >>> drivers/soc/ti/pruss.c | 60 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ >>> include/linux/remoteproc/pruss.h | 22 ++++++++++++ >>> 2 files changed, 82 insertions(+) >>> >>> diff --git a/drivers/soc/ti/pruss.c b/drivers/soc/ti/pruss.c >>> index 26d8129b515c..2f04b7922ddb 100644 >>> --- a/drivers/soc/ti/pruss.c >>> +++ b/drivers/soc/ti/pruss.c >>> @@ -203,6 +203,66 @@ static int pruss_cfg_update(struct pruss *pruss, unsigned int reg, >>> return regmap_update_bits(pruss->cfg_regmap, reg, mask, val); >>> } >>> >>> +/** >>> + * pruss_cfg_gpimode() - set the GPI mode of the PRU >>> + * @pruss: the pruss instance handle >>> + * @pru_id: id of the PRU core within the PRUSS >>> + * @mode: GPI mode to set >>> + * >>> + * Sets the GPI mode for a given PRU by programming the >>> + * corresponding PRUSS_CFG_GPCFGx register >>> + * >>> + * Return: 0 on success, or an error code otherwise >>> + */ >>> +int pruss_cfg_gpimode(struct pruss *pruss, enum pruss_pru_id pru_id, >>> + enum pruss_gpi_mode mode) >>> +{ >>> + if (pru_id < 0 || pru_id >= PRUSS_NUM_PRUS) >>> + return -EINVAL; >>> + >>> + if (mode < 0 || mode > PRUSS_GPI_MODE_MAX) >>> + return -EINVAL; >>> + >>> + return pruss_cfg_update(pruss, PRUSS_CFG_GPCFG(pru_id), >>> + PRUSS_GPCFG_PRU_GPI_MODE_MASK, >>> + mode << PRUSS_GPCFG_PRU_GPI_MODE_SHIFT); >>> +} >>> +EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL(pruss_cfg_gpimode); >>> + >>> +/** >>> + * pruss_cfg_miirt_enable() - Enable/disable MII RT Events >>> + * @pruss: the pruss instance >>> + * @enable: enable/disable >>> + * >>> + * Enable/disable the MII RT Events for the PRUSS. >>> + * >>> + * Return: 0 on success, or an error code otherwise >>> + */ >>> +int pruss_cfg_miirt_enable(struct pruss *pruss, bool enable) >>> +{ >>> + u32 set = enable ? PRUSS_MII_RT_EVENT_EN : 0; >>> + >>> + return pruss_cfg_update(pruss, PRUSS_CFG_MII_RT, >>> + PRUSS_MII_RT_EVENT_EN, set); >>> +} >>> +EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL(pruss_cfg_miirt_enable); >>> + >>> +/** >>> + * pruss_cfg_xfr_enable() - Enable/disable XIN XOUT shift functionality >>> + * @pruss: the pruss instance >>> + * @enable: enable/disable >>> + * @mask: Mask for PRU / RTU >> >> You should not expect the user to provide the mask but only >> the core type e.g. >> >> enum pru_type { >> PRU_TYPE_PRU = 0, >> PRU_TYPE_RTU, >> PRU_TYPE_TX_PRU, >> PRU_TYPE_MAX, >> }; >> >> Then you figure out the mask in the function. >> Also check for invalid pru_type and return error if so. >> > > Sure Roger, I will create a enum and take it as parameter in API. Based on > these enum I will calculate mask and do XFR shifting inside the API > pruss_cfg_xfr_enable(). > > There are two registers for XFR shift. > > #define PRUSS_SPP_XFER_SHIFT_EN BIT(1) > #define PRUSS_SPP_RTU_XFR_SHIFT_EN BIT(3) > > For PRU XFR shifting, the mask should be PRUSS_SPP_XFER_SHIFT_EN, > for RTU shifting mask should be PRUSS_SPP_RTU_XFR_SHIFT_EN and for PRU and RTU > shifting mask should be (PRUSS_SPP_XFER_SHIFT_EN | PRUSS_SPP_RTU_XFR_SHIFT_EN) > > So the enum would be something like this. > > /** > * enum xfr_shift_type - XFR shift type > * @XFR_SHIFT_PRU: Enables XFR shift for PRU > * @XFR_SHIFT_RTU: Enables XFR shift for RTU > * @XFR_SHIFT_PRU_RTU: Enables XFR shift for both PRU and RTU This is not required. User can call the API twice. once for PRU and once for RTU. > * @XFR_SHIFT_MAX: Total number of XFR shift types available. > * > */ > > enum xfr_shift_type { > XFR_SHIFT_PRU = 0, > XFR_SHIFT_RTU, > XFR_SHIFT_PRU_RTU, > XFR_SHIFT_MAX, > }; Why do you need this new enum definition? We already have pru_type defined somewhere. You can move it to a public header if not there yet. enum pru_type { PRU_TYPE_PRU = 0, PRU_TYPE_RTU, PRU_TYPE_TX_PRU, PRU_TYPE_MAX, }; > > In pruss_cfg_xfr_enable() API, I will use switch case, and for first three > enums, I will calculate the mask. > > If input is anything other than first three, I will retun -EINVAL. This will > serve as check for valid xfr_shift_type. > > The API will look like this. > > int pruss_cfg_xfr_enable(struct pruss *pruss, enum xfr_shift_type xfr_type, > bool enable); > { > u32 mask; > > switch (xfr_type) { > case XFR_SHIFT_PRU: > mask = PRUSS_SPP_XFER_SHIFT_EN; > break; > case XFR_SHIFT_RTU: > mask = PRUSS_SPP_RTU_XFR_SHIFT_EN; > break; > case XFR_SHIFT_PRU_RTU: > mask = PRUSS_SPP_XFER_SHIFT_EN | PRUSS_SPP_RTU_XFR_SHIFT_EN; > break; > default: > return -EINVAL; > } > > u32 set = enable ? mask : 0; > > return pruss_cfg_update(pruss, PRUSS_CFG_SPP, mask, set); > } > > This entire change I will keep as part of this patch only. > > Please let me know if this looks OK to you. > > cheers, -roger