+CC Linus, as this became also pinctrl related. On 08.08.2014 20:29, Javier Martinez Canillas wrote: > Hello, > > On 08/08/2014 06:38 PM, Javier Martinez Canillas wrote: >> >> >> It seems as if the first call to exynos_irq_set_type() that is made by OF is a >> no-op while the second call is the one that actually setups the hw correctly. >> Does this make any sense? Maybe is related to the pin not being muxed in the >> correct function when the "interrupts" property is parsed by OF? >> > > So after a conversation with Tomasz Figa over IRC the problem was after all that > the pin was reconfigured. The IRQ trigger type resulted to be just a red herring > and not a direct cause. > > The pinctrl-eyxnos driver does the IRQ pinmux setup in the .irq_set_type > function handler. So what happened was that OF parsed the "interrupts" property > and called exynos_irq_set_type() which did the pinmux setup. > > But after that, due a DTS pinctrl configuration the pin function was changed as > a GPIO input and that happened before the atmel driver was probed. So when the > driver called request_threaded_irq(), the correct flags were used but the pin > was not configured as an IRQ anymore so IRQ were not fired. > > Setting a trigger type just had the side effect of calling exynos_irq_set_type() > which again setup the pin as an IRQ. > > To fix the issue a variation of patch [0] will be posted that moves the IRQ > pinmux setup from .irq_set_type to the .irq_request_resources function handler. > That way the pin will be setup as IRQ regardless of the the trigger type [1] > when someone calls request_[threaded]_irq(). > > Only the mentioned patch fixes the issue but Tomasz said that even a call to > gpio_direction_{input,output} can change the pin configuration so he will post > another patch that will add a bit mask to samsung_pin_bank to prevent any pinmux > reconfiguration. To add a bit more information about the hardware, setting up a GPIO interrupt on Samsung SoCs is a two-step operation - in addition to trigger configuration in a dedicated register, the pinmux must be also reconfigured to GPIO interrupt, which is a different function than normal GPIO input, although I/O-wise they both behave in the same way and gpio_get_value() can be used on a pin configured as IRQ as well. I'm afraid that such design implies that handling of this in the driver must be done on a very low level, because it involves three possible interfaces changing the pinmux - pinctrl, GPIO and irqchip and such subtletes like gpio_direction_input() that shouldn't neither fail if a pin is already configured as an interrupt nor change the configuration to normal input. Best regards, Tomasz -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-samsung-soc" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html