On Fri, Nov 28, 2014 at 11:30:55AM +0100, Krzysztof Kozlowski wrote: > On czw, 2014-11-27 at 18:43 +0000, Mark Brown wrote: > > Why do we need some special magic operation for GPIO based enables > > that's separate to any other enable operation? This seems really > > confusing, if the constraint setting doesn't work somehow for GPIO based > > enables we should fix that. Though since this operation takes no > > parameters it's hard to see how it's supposed to apply constraints > > unless it reparses them which doesn't seem like a good idea... > The regulator driver no longer parses GPIO control from DTS. So somehow > it should be notified that regulator core parsed this and GPIO should be > enabled. > That is the purpose of ops->set_ena_gpio() call. This sort of thing is a sign that we're not saving much by moving the parsing to the core and perhaps there's more flexiblity here... It's also not something that should be in the constraints handling, it's not something that constrains the regulator. > > > +static int regulator_ena_gpio_setup(struct regulator_dev *rdev, > > > + const struct regulator_config *config, > > > + const struct regulator_init_data *init_data) > > Why is setting up the GPIO different to requesting it, especially given > > that we have an existing function called _request() which still exists? > Maybe the name was not a best choice. The setup calls request. > My patchset here tried to retain the compatibility with > "config.ena_gpio" way so the core would accept GPIOs passed in one of > two ways: > 1. old: config.ena_gpio, > 2. new: parsed by core from DTS. > The request function previously worked only on "config.ena_gpio" and I > changed it here to accept any GPIO. The setup uses one of GPIO methods > (old or new) and calls request with appropriate GPIO. We need to support both methods since not all the world is DT. What I can't tell is how this code achieves these objectives - it seems to be an awfully big patch if that's all it's supposed to be doing, I'd expect just a conditional where we try the two methods in turn. It may be that there's a good reason for all this but that needs to be made clear.
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