On 15.12.2021 16:59, David Mosberger-Tang wrote: > EXTERNAL EMAIL: Do not click links or open attachments unless you know the content is safe > > On Wed, 2021-12-15 at 06:41 +0000, Claudiu.Beznea@xxxxxxxxxxxxx wrote: >> On 15.12.2021 05:05, David Mosberger-Tang wrote: >>> >> +static int wilc_parse_gpios(struct wilc *wilc) >>> +{ >>> + struct spi_device *spi = to_spi_device(wilc->dev); >>> + struct wilc_spi *spi_priv = wilc->bus_data; >>> + struct wilc_gpios *gpios = &spi_priv->gpios; >>> + >>> + /* get ENABLE pin and deassert it (if it is defined): */ >>> + gpios->enable = devm_gpiod_get_optional(&spi->dev, >>> + "enable", GPIOD_OUT_LOW); >>> + /* get RESET pin and assert it (if it is defined): */ >>> + if (gpios->enable) { >>> + /* if enable pin exists, reset must exist as well */ >>> + gpios->reset = devm_gpiod_get(&spi->dev, >>> + "reset", GPIOD_OUT_HIGH); >> >> As far as I can tell form gpiolib code the difference b/w GPIOD_OUT_HIGH >> and GPIOD_OUT_LOW in gpiolib is related to the initial value for the GPIO. > > Yes. > >> Did you used GPIOD_OUT_HIGH for reset to have the chip out of reset at this >> point? > > No, ~RESET is an active-low signal. GPIOD_OUT_LOW should really be > called GPIOD_OUT_DEASSERTED or something like that. The code ensures > that the chip is in RESET and ~ENABLEd after parsing the GPIOs. > >>> + if (IS_ERR(gpios->reset)) { >>> + dev_err(&spi->dev, "missing reset gpio.\n"); >>> + return PTR_ERR(gpios->reset); >>> + } >>> + } else { >>> + gpios->reset = devm_gpiod_get_optional(&spi->dev, >>> + "reset", GPIOD_OUT_HIGH); >>> + } >>> + return 0; >>> +} >>> + >>> +static void wilc_wlan_power(struct wilc *wilc, bool on) >>> +{ >>> + struct wilc_spi *spi_priv = wilc->bus_data; >>> + struct wilc_gpios *gpios = &spi_priv->gpios; >>> + >>> + if (on) { >>> + gpiod_set_value(gpios->enable, 1); /* assert ENABLE */ >>> + mdelay(5); >>> + gpiod_set_value(gpios->reset, 0); /* deassert RESET */ >> >> From what I can tell from gpiolib code, requesting the pin from device tree >> with: >> >> + reset-gpios = <&pioA 6 GPIO_ACTIVE_LOW>; >> >> makes the value written with gpiod_set_value() to be negated, thus the 0 >> written here is translated to a 1 on the pin. Is there a reason you did it >> like this? > > Yes, of course. RESET is an active-low signal, as defined in the > datasheet. Right, I missed that. > >> Would it have been simpler to have both pins requested with >> GPIO_ACTIVE_HIGH and here to do gpiod_set_value(gpio, 1) for both of the >> pin. In this way, at the first read of the code one one would have been >> telling that it does what datasheet specifies: for power on toggle enable >> and reset gpios from 0 to 1 with a delay in between. > > I think you're confusing 0 and 1 with low-voltage and high-voltage. 0 > means de-assert the signal, 1 means assert the signal. Whether that > translates to a low voltage or a high voltage depends on whether the > signal a active-low or active-high. > >> >> >>> + } else { >>> + gpiod_set_value(gpios->reset, 1); /* assert RESET */ >>> + gpiod_set_value(gpios->enable, 0); /* deassert ENABLE */ >> >> I don't usually see comments near the code line in kernel. Maybe move them >> before the actual code line or remove them at all as the code is impler enough? > > You're kidding, right? > > --david >