Re: [PATCH] pinctrl: Add generic pinctrl-simple driver that supports omap2+ padconf

[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]

 



* Stephen Warren <swarren@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> [120504 12:27]:
> On 05/02/2012 11:24 AM, Tony Lindgren wrote:
> 
> > diff --git a/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/pinctrl/pinctrl-simple.txt b/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/pinctrl/pinctrl-simple.txt
> 
> > +Required properties:
> > +- compatible :  one of:
> > +	- "pinctrl-simple"
> > +	- "ti,omap2420-padconf"
> > +	- "ti,omap2430-padconf"
> > +	- "ti,omap3-padconf"
> > +	- "ti,omap4-padconf"
> 
> I'm in two minds about this.
> 
> If this is truly intended to be generic, I would not document any of the
> ti compatible values here. Instead, I'd create a binding document for
> the TI controllers that basically just says "this uses the bindings in
> pinctrl-simple.txt, with the following additions", and list the
> compatible values as an addition.

Hmm sure makes sense. I'll move the TI specific stuff into a separate
doc.
 
> On the other hand, I worry about whether using "pinctrl-simple" here as
> the compatible value is going to cause issues:
> 
> Certainly, this is a pretty simple driver, and most likely reasonably
> generic an applicable to many SoCs. However, it doesn't cover a bunch of
> cases that I'd still consider "simple". For example, what if each pin
> has a separate mux and pinconf register? There are probably many such
> small cases that would add up to something more complex. to cover those
> cases, will we be able to extend pinctrl-simple to cover them, and
> continue to be backwards compatible, or will we need to create a
> binding/driver for pinctrl-simple-1, pinctrl-simple-2, pinctrl-simple-3
> each of which covers some different, yet still simple, configuration?

Yes getting the binding right is the critical part here, everything else
can be added as needed. I was thinking about using separate properties
for auxilary registers, but now thinking about it a bit more, it may not
be sufficient.

How about we make some of these properties into arrays? For example:

#pinctrl-cells = 6;
pinctrl-simple,function-mask = <0x0000ffff 0x0000ffff 0xffff0000>;
pinctrl-simple,function-off = <0x7 0x7 0x70000>;
pinctrl-simple,pinconf-mask = <0xffff0000 0xffff0000 0x0000ffff>;

Then for handling the set/clear bits case of registers, we could do that
automatically if both masks are 0 for some registers. We actually have
that for some omap1 where there are three registers per mux with bits
to set or clear. And these bits are not the same across all registers..

> To resolve this, perhaps it would be best to rework this binding and
> driver as a set of utility code that other bindings and drivers can
> build upon, rather than making it a standalone directly usable driver
> and binding.
> 
> Honestly, I'm not really sure which way to go here.

Sure that's doable, but sounds like that can be also done later after
the binding is agreed on.

> > +- reg : offset and length of the register set for the mux registers
> > +- #pinctrl-cells : width of the pinctrl array, currently only 2 is supported
> > +- pinctrl-simple,register-width : pinmux register access width
> > +- pinctrl-simple,function-mask : mask of allowed pinmux function bits
> > +- pinctrl-simple,function-off : function off mode for disabled state
> > +- pinctrl-simple,pinconf-mask : mask of allowed pinconf bits
> > +
> > +This driver uses the common pinctrl bindings as specified in
> > +pinctrl-bindings.txt document in this directory. The common bindings are used
> > +to specify the client device states using pinctrl-0 and pinctrl-names entries.
> 
> I think just remove the second sentence there; it's implicit given the
> first.

Sure.
 
> > +/* board specific .dts file, such as omap4-sdp.dts */
> > +&omap4_pmx_core {
> > +
> > +	/*
> > +	 * map all board specific static pins enabled by the pinctrl driver
> > +	 * itself during the boot (or just set them up in the bootloader)
> > +	 */
> > +	pinctrl-names = "default";
> > +	pinctrl-0 = <&board_pins>;
> > +
> > +	board_pins: pinmux_board_pins {
> > +		board_static_pins {
> 
> I'd like to see a little more explanation of the node structure here.
> I.e. what does each node represent, why are there two levels of nodes, etc.
> 
> Given that the "pinctrl-simple,cells" can specify both mux function and
> pin configuration for each pin, i.e. everything you need to, I don't see
> why you'd ever need two levels of nodes here. I'd expect each "pin
> configuration node" (in pinctrl core bindings terminology) to be a
> single level:
> 
> node {
>     pinctrl-simple,cells = <...>;
> };
> 
> where node is what's references in the pinctrl-0 property by pinctrl
> client drivers.

Good point, it seems we can remove the subnodes for the cases where we
parse multiple registers in one entry. Two levels of nodes are needed for
the cases where we need to specify GPIO for a pin.
 
> > +			pinctrl-simple,cells = <
> 
> "cells" here doesn't seem like the right word. Perhaps "pins" or
> "configuration"? "Cell"s to me seems semi-reserved for binding cell
> count description, like #gpio-cells, #address-cells, etc.

Sure, "pins" works just as well here, it's shorter than "configuration".
 
> Also, there's nothing in the free-form text part of this binding
> document that says describes the set of properties that need to exist in
> these "pin configuration nodes", nor what their content is.

Will add.
 
> > +				0x6c 0xf	/* CSI21_DX3 OMAP_PIN_OUTPUT | OMAP_MUX_MODE7 */
> > +				0x6e 0xf	/* CSI21_DY3 OMAP_PIN_OUTPUT | OMAP_MUX_MODE7 */
> > +				0x70 0xf	/* CSI21_DX4 OMAP_PIN_OUTPUT | OMAP_MUX_MODE7 */
> > +				0x72 0xf	/* CSI21_DY4 OMAP_PIN_OUTPUT | OMAP_MUX_MODE7 */
> > +			>;
> > +		};
> > +	};
> > +
> > +
> > +	/* map all uart2 pins as a single function */
> > +	uart2_pins: pinmux_uart2_pins {
> > +		uart2_pins {
> > +			pinctrl-simple,cells = <
> > +				0xd8 0x118	/* UART2_CTS OMAP_PIN_INPUT_PULLUP | OMAP_MUX_MODE0 */
> > +				0xda 0		/* UART2_RTS OMAP_PIN_OUTPUT | OMAP_MUX_MODE0 */
> > +				0xdc 0x118	/* UART2_RX OMAP_PIN_INPUT_PULLUP | OMAP_MUX_MODE0 */
> > +				0xde 0		/* UART2_TX OMAP_PIN_OUTPUT | OMAP_MUX_MODE0 */
> > +			>;
> > +		};
> > +	};
> > +
> > +	/* map all uart3 pins as separate functions */
> > +	uart3_pins: pinmux_uart3_pins {
> 
> From a binding perspective, I don't see why you'd want to allow two cases:
> 
> 1) One node with multiple entries in pinctrl-simple,cells
> 2) Multiple nodes each with a single entry in pinctrl-simple,cells
> 
> Why not only allow (1)?

Because we need to specify GPIO for some pins. There may be additional flags
too, we do have external DMA request lines for few pins available.. I'm not
saying pinctrl fwk should know about that, but it's a similar mapping of pins
to GPIO lines.

We don't want to do (2) only because it makes things slower. Typically
a board would mux most pins (could be a few hundred) as a single type (1)
entry, and then have some driver specific type (2) entries.
 
> > diff --git a/drivers/pinctrl/pinctrl-simple.c b/drivers/pinctrl/pinctrl-simple.c
> 
> > +struct pcs_device {
> ...
> > +	unsigned (*read)(void __iomem *reg);
> > +	void (*write)(unsigned val, void __iomem *reg);
> > +};
> 
> Why not use regmap instead of writing your own:
> 
> > +static unsigned __maybe_unused pcs_readb(void __iomem *reg)
> > +static unsigned __maybe_unused pcs_readw(void __iomem *reg)
> ...
> 
> regmap recently gained support for memory-mapped IO, so should work for
> this. Also, using regmap might allow this binding/driver to be easily
> extended to support e.g. I2C-/SPI-based pin controller hardware, since
> regmap would handle all the IO details for you.

Cool, will take a look.
 
> Supporting these different IO modes might require a little more thought
> though. For example, an I2C device's reg refers to its location on the
> parent bus, rather than the address of the registers within the device.
> We'd probably need to augment parent busses with some method for child
> devices to acquire a regmap object for their own IO in order to hide
> this from drivers.

Yeah that could be added later.

Regards,

Tony
--
To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-omap" in
the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
More majordomo info at  http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html


[Index of Archives]     [Linux Arm (vger)]     [ARM Kernel]     [ARM MSM]     [Linux Tegra]     [Linux WPAN Networking]     [Linux Wireless Networking]     [Maemo Users]     [Linux USB Devel]     [Video for Linux]     [Linux Audio Users]     [Yosemite Trails]     [Linux Kernel]     [Linux SCSI]

  Powered by Linux