Re: [RFC 1/2] ARM: S3C24XX: add devicetree support for interrupts

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On 26 November 2012 17:43, Heiko Stübner <heiko@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:
> Hi Thomas,
>
> Am Montag, 26. November 2012, 12:03:22 schrieb Thomas Abraham:
>> Hi Heiko,
>>
>> On 25 November 2012 06:17, Heiko Stübner <heiko@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:
>> > This adds devicetree parsing of the controller-data for the
>> > interrupt controllers on S3C24XX architectures.
>> >
>> > Signed-off-by: Heiko Stuebner <heiko@xxxxxxxxx>
>> > ---
>> >
>> >  .../interrupt-controller/samsung,s3c24xx-irq.txt   |   57 ++++++
>> >  arch/arm/mach-s3c24xx/common.h                     |    1 +
>> >  arch/arm/plat-s3c24xx/irq.c                        |  197
>> >  ++++++++++++++++++++ 3 files changed, 255 insertions(+), 0 deletions(-)
>> >  create mode 100644
>> >  Documentation/devicetree/bindings/interrupt-controller/samsung,s3c24xx-
>> >  irq.txt
>> >
>> > diff --git
>> > a/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/interrupt-controller/samsung,s3c24xx
>> > -irq.txt
>> > b/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/interrupt-controller/samsung,s3c24xx
>> > -irq.txt new file mode 100644
>> > index 0000000..c637637
>> > --- /dev/null
>> > +++
>> > b/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/interrupt-controller/samsung,s3c24xx
>> > -irq.txt @@ -0,0 +1,57 @@
>> > +Samsung S3C24XX Interrupt Controllers
>> > +
>> > +The S3C24XX SoCs contain custom set of interrupt controllers providing a
>> > +varying number of interrupt sources.
>> > +
>> > +The set consists of a main- and a sub-controller as well as a controller
>> > +for the external interrupts and on newer SoCs even a second main
>> > controller. +
>> > +The bit-to-interrupt and parent mapping of the controllers is not fixed
>> > +over all SoCs and therefore must be defined in the controller
>> > description. +
>> > +Required properties:
>> > +- compatible: Compatible property value should be "samsung,s3c24xx-irq".
>> > +
>> > +- reg: Physical base address of the controller and length of memory
>> > mapped +  region.
>> > +
>> > +- interrupt-controller : Identifies the node as an interrupt controller
>> > +- #interrupt-cells : Specifies the number of cells needed to encode an
>> > +  interrupt source. The value shall be 2.
>> > +
>> > +- s3c24xx,irqlist : List of irqtypes found on this controller as
>> > +  two-value pairs consisting of irqtype and parent-irq
>> > +
>> > +  parent-irq is always the list position of the irq in the irqlist
>> > +  of the parent controller (0..31)
>> > +
>> > +  irqtypes are:
>> > +  - 0 .. none
>> > +  - 1 .. external interrupts in the main register (GPF0 .. GPF3)
>> > +  - 2 .. edge irq in the main register
>> > +  - 3 .. for parent-irqs, that have sub-irqs in child controllers
>> > +  - 4 .. level irqs in the sub-register
>> > +  - 5 .. edge irqs in the sub-register
>> > +  - 6 .. external irqs in the external irq register (starting with GPF4)
>> > +  - 7 .. irq in the second base irq controller of S3C2416/S3C2450 SoCs
>>
>> Instead of defining the type of interrupt controller as above, is it
>> possible to create multiple device nodes, with each node representing
>> a type of interrupt controller with a unique compatible string and
>> corresponding properties. There will be a init function for each type
>> of interrupt controller. There should be a irq-domain for each of
>> these different types of interrupt controller. And then, in the device
>> tree source file, a proper tree like hierarchy of interrupt
>> controllers can defined (using the interrupt-parent property for each
>> controller node). The client nodes that generate the interrupt can
>> specify the parent node and the interrupt number within the parent to
>> which they generate the interrupt.
>
> I'm not sure I understand yet :-). The list describes the types of interrupts
> inside the individual controllers.
>
> On all the s3c24xx we have three register sets denoting the main (SRCPND,
> INTPND, INTMSK), sub (SUBSRCPEND, INTSUBMASK) and extint (EINTPEND, EINTMASK)
> controllers. The bits of these registers are used for quite different irqs.

We could consider main, sub and extint as three separate interrupt
controllers and thus three different nodes in device tree. So the
interrupt nodes could be something like (referring to 2416 manual).

     main@0x4a000000 {
            compatible = "samsung,s3c2410-main";
            reg = <0x4a000000 0x100>;
            interrupt-controller;
            #interrupt-cells = <2>;
     };

     sub@0x4a001000 {
            compatible = "samsung,s3c2410-sub";
            reg = <0x4a001000 0x100>;
            interrupt-controller;
            #interrupt-cells = <2>;
            interrupt-parent = <&main>;
            interrupts = <28 0>, <23 0>, <.....  /*uart0/uart1/..*/
     };

     eint@0x4a002000 {
            compatible = "samsung,s3c2410-eint";
            reg = <0x4a002000 0x100>;
            interrupt-controller;
            #interrupt-cells = <2>;
            interrupt-parent = <&main>;
            interrupts = <0 0>, <1 0>,
                              <2 0>, <3 0>,
                              <4 0>, <5 0>;
     };

There should be a corresponding irqchip driver code to handle each of
these types of controllers. They should have their own irq-domain
supported.

Then the client nodes can specify the interrupt parent and interrupt
number. For example, the uart node would be

       uart@50000000 {
            compatible = "samsung,s3c2410-uart";
            reg = <0x50000000 0x100>;
            interrupt-parent = <&sub>;
            interrupts = <0 0>, <1 0>, <2 0>; /*tx/rx/err*/
       };

> For example is bit 17 of the main register set used as DMA0 on earlier socs
> while the dma interrupts moved to the subint registers for s3c2443 and later.

Writing the nodes with the correct interrupt parent and the interrupt
number should take care of this.

>
> So the entries in the irqlist describe the needed handlers for the hwirq bits
> of the indidual controllers. So in this scheme you set for dt-devices the
> interrupt parent to the correct register set and the interrupts field then
> matches the bit of the register, according to the datasheet.
>
> When I changed the basic interrupt handling in the previous set, the changed
> irq.c can for exmaple be found on [0], I created these lists in the code and
> soc specific routines to init them for the still valid non-dt case.
>
> But as dt is about describing the hardware, I found the current solution nice,
> because will I only need exactly one dt-init-function for all s3c24xx-socs,
> instead of representing all the slight variances in code.
>
> I'm definitly not sure if all the different types of individual irq handlers
> are strictly necessary yet, but they represent all the variants that were in
> use in the original code.

I have brought up this point just for discussion. You could choose the
implementation that you prefer. I understand that implementing with
different interrupt controller nodes might require lot of code
changes.

Thanks,
Thomas.
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