On Sun, Sep 22, 2013 at 4:40 PM, Javier Martinez Canillas <javier.martinez@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > To use a GPIO pin as an interrupt line, two previous configurations > have to be made: > > a) Map the GPIO pin as an interrupt line into the Linux irq space > b) Enable the GPIO bank and configure the GPIO direction as input > > Most GPIO/IRQ chip drivers just create a mapping for every single > GPIO pin with irq_create_mapping() on .probe so users usually can > assume a) and only have to do b) by using the following sequence: > > gpio_request(gpio, "foo IRQ"); > gpio_direction_input(gpio); > > and then request a IRQ with: > > irq = gpio_to_irq(gpio); > request_irq(irq, ...); I guess I have to live with this approach, but I'd like to - if possible - address my pet issue. - It is OK that the HW get set up as GPIO input by the IRQ request function alone. (Through gpio_irq_type I guess). - When a second caller calls omap_gpio_request() it should be OK as well, but only if the flags corresponds to the previously enabled input mode. Else it should be disallowed. - The same should happen for _set_gpio_direction() if a pin previously set up for IRQ gets a request to be used as output. If this cannot be tracked in the driver, it is certainly a candidate for something that gpiolib should be doing. And then I'm open to solutions to how we can do that. If this needs to be applied pronto to fix the regression I'm happy with that too, if we add a big boilerplate stating the above problem and that it needs to be *fixed* at some point. But in either case I want this to be tested on OMAP1 before I apply it, as in a Tested-by tag. Yours, Linus Walleij -- 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